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An Unusual Stellar Death on Christmas Day

Authors :
Thone, C. C
de Ugarte Postigo, A
Fryer, C. L
Page, K. L
Gorosabel, J
Aloy, M. A
Perley, D. A
Kouveliotou, C
Janka, H. T
Mimica, P
Racusin, J. L
Krimm, H
Cummings, J
Oates, S. R
Holland, S. T
Siegel, M. H
De Pasquale, M
Sonbas, E
Im, M
Park, W. K
Kann, D. A
Guziy, S
Hernandez Garcia, L
Llorente, A
Bundy, K
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2011.

Abstract

Long Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) are the most dramatic examples of massive stellar deaths, usually associated with supernovae. They release ultra-relativistic jets producing non-thermal emission through synchrotron radiation as they interact with the surrounding medium. Here we report observations of the peculiar GRB 101225A (the "Christmas burst"). Its gamma-ray emission was exceptionally long and followed by a bright X-ray transient with a hot thermal component and an unusual optical couuterpart. During the first 10 days, the optical emission evolved as an expanding, cooling blackbody after which an additional component, consistent with a faint supernova, emerged. We determine its distance to 1.6 Gpc by fitting the spectral-energy distribution and light curve of the optical emission with a GRB-supernova template. Deep optical observations may have revealed a faint, unresolved host galaxy. Our proposed progenitor is a helium star-neutron star merger that underwent a common envelope phase expelling its hydrogen envelope. The resulting explosion created a GRB-like jet which gets thermalized by interacting with the dense, previously ejected material and thus creating the observed black-body, until finally the emission from the supernova dominated. An alternative explanation is a minor body falling onto a neutron star io the Galaxy

Subjects

Subjects :
Astronomy

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20120011805
Document Type :
Report