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GRB 191016A: A Long Gamma-Ray Burst Detected by TESS

Authors :
Smith, Krista Lynne
Ridden-Harper, Ryan
Fausnaugh, Michael
Daylan, Tansu
Omodei, Nicola
Racusin, Judith
Weaver, Zachary
Barclay, Thomas
Veres, Péter
Kann, D. Alexander
Arimoto, Makoto
Source :
2021ApJ...911...43S
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The TESS exoplanet-hunting mission detected the rising and decaying optical afterglow of GRB 191016A, a long Gamma-Ray Burst (GRB) detected by Swift-BAT but without prompt XRT or UVOT follow-up due to proximity to the moon. The afterglow has a late peak at least 1000 seconds after the BAT trigger, with a brightest-detected TESS datapoint at 2589.7 s post-trigger. The burst was not detected by Fermi-LAT, but was detected by Fermi-GBM without triggering, possibly due to the gradual nature of rising light curve. Using ground-based photometry, we estimate a photometric redshift of $z_\mathrm{phot} = 3.29\pm{0.40}$. Combined with the high-energy emission and optical peak time derived from TESS, estimates of the bulk Lorentz factor $\Gamma_\mathrm{BL}$ range from $90-133$. The burst is relatively bright, with a peak optical magnitude in ground-based follow-up of $R=15.1$ mag. Using published distributions of GRB afterglows and considering the TESS sensitivity and sampling, we estimate that TESS is likely to detect $\sim1$ GRB afterglow per year above its magnitude limit.<br />Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
2021ApJ...911...43S
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2102.11295
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/abe6a2