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AGILE Gamma-Ray Detection of the Exceptional GRB 221009A

Authors :
Marco Tavani
Giovanni Piano
Andrea Bulgarelli
Luca Foffano
Alessandro Ursi
Francesco Verrecchia
Carlotta Pittori
Claudio Casentini
Andrea Giuliani
Francesco Longo
Gabriele Panebianco
Ambra Di Piano
Leonardo Baroncelli
Valentina Fioretti
Nicolò Parmiggiani
Andrea Argan
Alessio Trois
Stefano Vercellone
Martina Cardillo
Lucio Angelo Antonelli
Guido Barbiellini
Patrizia Caraveo
Paolo W. Cattaneo
Andrew W. Chen
Enrico Costa
Ettore Del Monte
Guido Di Cocco
Immacolata Donnarumma
Yuri Evangelista
Marco Feroci
Fulvio Gianotti
Claudio Labanti
Francesco Lazzarotto
Paolo Lipari
Fabrizio Lucarelli
Martino Marisaldi
Sandro Mereghetti
Aldo Morselli
Luigi Pacciani
Alberto Pellizzoni
Francesco Perotti
Piergiorgio Picozza
Maura Pilia
Massimo Rapisarda
Andrea Rappoldi
Alda Rubini
Paolo Soffitta
Massimo Trifoglio
Valerio Vittorini
Fabio D’Amico
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal Letters, Vol 956, Iss 1, p L23 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2023.

Abstract

Gamma-ray emission in the MeV–GeV range from explosive cosmic events is of invaluable relevance to understanding physical processes related to the formation of neutron stars and black holes. Here we report on the detection by the AGILE satellite in the MeV–GeV energy range of the remarkable long-duration gamma-ray burst GRB 221009A. The AGILE onboard detectors have good exposure to GRB 221009A during its initial crucial phases. Hard X-ray/MeV emission in the prompt phase lasted hundreds of seconds, with the brightest radiation being emitted between 200 and 300 s after the initial trigger. Very intense GeV gamma-ray emission is detected by AGILE in the prompt and early afterglow phase up to 10,000 s. Time-resolved spectral analysis shows time-variable MeV-peaked emission simultaneous with intense power-law GeV radiation that persists in the afterglow phase. The coexistence during the prompt phase of very intense MeV emission together with highly nonthermal and hardening GeV radiation is a remarkable feature of GRB 221009A. During the prompt phase, the event shows spectrally different MeV and GeV emissions that are most likely generated by physical mechanisms occurring in different locations. AGILE observations provide crucial flux and spectral gamma-ray information regarding the early phases of GRB 221009A during which emission in the TeV range was reported.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20418213 and 20418205
Volume :
956
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal Letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0eb89db923724fcdbb3f3e6755540905
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/acfaff