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GRB 221009A: The BOAT

Authors :
Eric Burns
Dmitry Svinkin
Edward Fenimore
D. Alexander Kann
José Feliciano Agüí Fernández
Dmitry Frederiks
Rachel Hamburg
Stephen Lesage
Yuri Temiraev
Anastasia Tsvetkova
Elisabetta Bissaldi
Michael S. Briggs
Sarah Dalessi
Rachel Dunwoody
Cori Fletcher
Adam Goldstein
C. Michelle Hui
Boyan A. Hristov
Daniel Kocevski
Alexandra L. Lysenko
Bagrat Mailyan
Joseph Mangan
Sheila McBreen
Judith Racusin
Anna Ridnaia
Oliver J. Roberts
Mikhail Ulanov
Peter Veres
Colleen A. Wilson-Hodge
Joshua Wood
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal Letters, Vol 946, Iss 1, p L31 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2023.

Abstract

GRB 221009A has been referred to as the brightest of all time (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 ∼99th percentile of the known distribution. We explore how such a burst can be powered and discuss potential implications for ultralong 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, it is almost certainly not the BOAT over all of cosmic history; it may be the brightest gamma-ray burst since human civilization began.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20418213 and 20418205
Volume :
946
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal Letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.624a4cd3cce74b31bb662ac341718c71
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/acc39c