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GRBs as Probes of the Early Universe with TSO

Authors :
Tanvir, Nial
Grindlay, Jonathan
Berger, Edo
Metzger, Brian
Gezari, Suvi
Ivezic, Zeljko
Jencson, Jacob
Kasliwal, Mansi
Kutyrev, Alexander
Macleod, Chelsea
Melnick, Gary
Purcell, Bill
Rieke, George
Shen, Yue
Vasey, Michael Wood
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Long gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are the most luminous known electromagnetic radiation sources in the Universe for the 3 to 300 sec of their prompt flashes (isotropic X/ gamma-ray luminosities up to 10^53 ergs/sec). Their afterglows have first day rest-frame UV/optical absolute magnitudes AB = -30 to -23. This luminous continuum nUV-nIR back-light provides the ultimate probe of the SFR(z) back to the first Pop III to II.5 stars, expected to be massive and GRB progenitors. GRB afterglow spectra in the first 1 to 3 hours will directly measure their host galaxy ionization fraction x_i vs. z in the Epoch of Reionization (EOR), tracing the growth of structure. Only 28% of Swift GRBs have measured redshifts due to limited followup at R, J >21. Some ~25% of GRBs are optically dark due to dust absorption in their host galaxies, but those with low NH in their X-ray spectra are likely at z >7. Current 8-10m telescopes and coming ELTs cannot pursue optically dark GRBs promptly, nor can JWST or WFIRST slew within 0.5 to 1 days of a GRB. The Time-domain Spectroscopic Observatory (TSO) is a proposed Probe-class 1.3m telescope at L2, with imaging and spectroscopy (R = 200, 1800) in 4 bands (0.3 to 5um) and rapid slew capability to 90% of sky. TSO would finally utilize z > 6 to 12 GRBs as the most direct probe of the SFR(z), EOR(z), and possibly the first direct detection of the core collapse of the very first (Pop III) stars.<br />Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, Science White Paper submitted to the Astro2020 Decadal Survey

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1903.07835
Document Type :
Working Paper