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GRB 221009A, The BOAT

Authors :
Burns, Eric
Svinkin, Dmitry
Fenimore, Edward
Kann, D. Alexander
Fernández, José Feliciano Agüí
Frederiks, Dmitry
Hamburg, Rachel
Lesage, Stephen
Temiraev, Yuri
Tsvetkova, Anastasia
Bissaldi, Elisabetta
Briggs, Michael S.
Fletcher, Cori
Goldstein, Adam
Hui, C. Michelle
Hristov, Boyan A.
Kocevski, Daniel
Lysenko, Alexandra L.
Mailyan, Bagrat
Racusin, Judith
Ridnaia, Anna
Roberts, Oliver J.
Ulanov, Mikhail
Veres, Peter
Wilson-Hodge, Colleen A.
Wood, Joshua
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
arXiv, 2023.

Abstract

GRB 221009A has been referred to as the Brightest Of All Time (the BOAT). We investigate the veracity of this statement by comparing it with a half century of prompt gamma-ray burst observations. This burst is the brightest ever detected by the measures of peak flux and fluence. Unexpectedly, GRB 221009A has the highest isotropic-equivalent total energy ever identified, while the peak luminosity is at the $\sim99$th percentile of the known distribution. We explore how such a burst can be powered and discuss potential implications for ultra-long and high-redshift gamma-ray bursts. By geometric extrapolation of the total fluence and peak flux distributions GRB 221009A appears to be a once in 10,000 year event. Thus, while it almost certainly not the BOAT over all of cosmic history, it may be the brightest gamma-ray burst since human civilization began.<br />Resubmitted to ApJL

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b500eee0a35a5dfe07b551ddf2a4f2e9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2302.14037