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Detailed polarization measurements of the prompt emission of five Gamma-Ray Bursts

Authors :
Zhang, Shuang-Nan
Kole, Merlin
Bao, Tian-Wei
Batsch, Tadeusz
Bernasconi, Tancredi
Cadoux, Franck
Chai, Jun-Ying
Dai, Zi-Gao
Dong, Yong-Wei
Gauvin, Neal
Hajdas, Wojtek
Lan, Mi-Xiang
Li, Han-Cheng
Li, Lu
Li, Zheng-Heng
Liu, Jiang-Tao
Liu, Xin
Marcinkowski, Radoslaw
Orsi, Silvio
Produit, Nicolas
Pohl, Martin
Rybka, Dominik
Shi, Hao-Li
Song, Li-Ming
Sun, Jian-Chao
Szabelski, Jacek
Tymieniecka, Teresa
Wang, Rui-Jie
Wang, Yuan-Hao
Wen, Xing
Wu, Bo-Bing
Wu, Xin
Wu, Xue-Feng
Xiao, Hua-Lin
Xiong, Shao-Lin
Zhang, Lai-Yu
Zhang, Li
Zhang, Xiao-Feng
Zhang, Yong-Jie
Zwolinska, Anna
Source :
Nature Astronomy Volume 3, 2019
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Gamma-ray bursts are the strongest explosions in the Universe since the Big Bang, believed to be produced either in forming black holes at the end of massive star evolution or merging of compact objects. Spectral and timing properties of gamma-ray bursts suggest that the observed bright gamma-rays are produced in the most relativistic jets in the Universe; however, the physical properties, especially the structure and magnetic topologies in the jets are still not well known, despite several decades of studies. It is widely believed that precise measurements of the polarization properties of gamma-ray bursts should provide crucial information on the highly relativistic jets. As a result there have been many reports of gamma-ray burst polarization measurements with diverse results, see, however many such measurements suffered from substantial uncertainties, mostly systematic. After the first successful measurements by the GAP and COSI instruments, here we report a statistically meaningful sample of precise polarization measurements, obtained with the dedicated gamma-ray burst polarimeter, POLAR onboard China's Tiangong-2 spacelab. Our results suggest that the gamma-ray emission is at most polarized at a level lower than some popular models have predicted; although our results also show intrapulse evolution of the polarization angle. This indicates that the low polarization degrees could be due to an evolving polarization angle during a gamma-ray burst.<br />Comment: 34 pages, 15 figures (16 pages and 3 figures without supplementary information). Accepted for publication in Nature Astronomy, http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41550-018-0664-0

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Nature Astronomy Volume 3, 2019
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1901.04207
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-018-0664-0