1 / 23

Rise and Fall of the X-ray flash 080330: an off-axis jet?

Rise and Fall of the X-ray flash 080330: an off-axis jet?. C.Guidorzi 1,2,3 on behalf of a large collaboration of the Swift, Liverpool and Faulkes Telescopes, GROND, NOT, REM, TAROT teams and in particular S. Kobayashi and J. Granot. 1 INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico Brera, Italy

quant
Download Presentation

Rise and Fall of the X-ray flash 080330: an off-axis jet?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Rise and Fall of the X-ray flash 080330: an off-axis jet? C.Guidorzi 1,2,3 on behalf of a large collaboration of the Swift, Liverpool and Faulkes Telescopes, GROND, NOT, REM, TAROT teams and in particular S. Kobayashi and J. Granot 1INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico Brera, Italy 2Astrophysics Research Institute, Liverpool John Moores University, UK 3Physics Dept. University of Ferrara, Italy

  2. Outline • X-Ray Flashes (XRFs) as a class of GRBs • XRF 080330: broadband data set • Observed properties: • prompt -ray emission • Broadband (X-ray,UV,B,V,r,i,z,J,H,Ks) afterglow (light curves, SED) • Interpretation of XRF 080330 properties Egypt 2009

  3. X-ray Flashes (XRFs) A softer and less energetic version of classical GRBs (Heise et al. 2001; Kippen et al. 2001) e.g. Ep vs. Eiso relation (Amati et al. 2008) Egypt 2009

  4. XRFs vs. c-GRBs = • Overall, same prompt temporal properties • On average, same afterglow properties(although see Sakamoto et al. 2008 and the Swift sample) • Associations (or lack of) with hypernovae ≠ • XRFs are softer, due to a lower Ep (≤ 30 keV), while c-GRBs have Ep of a few 100 keV. • In some cases, less energetic and smoother -ray light curves(e.g. 060218, Campana et al., 2006) Egypt 2009

  5. F Peak Energy: Ep XRF XRR GRB Sakamoto et al. 2008 Egypt 2009

  6. XRF 080330 • Swift-BAT (15-150 keV) detected and promptly localised it. • Swift-XRT and UVOT promptly followed it up and began at 77 sec post trigger time  X-ray and UV afterglow. • Several robotic facilities promptly reacted and discovered the rising optical counterpart: in particular, 2-m class telescopes (GROND, and LT). Egypt 2009

  7. -ray prompt emission Egypt 2009

  8. -ray prompt emission • Swift-BAT (15-150 keV) detected and promptly localised it. • Ep < 35 keV • 4 pulses • Marginal soft-to-hard evolution, from 2 to 1.5 • S(15-150 keV)= 3.6 x 10-7 erg cm-2 • Eiso < 2.2 x 1052 ergs XRT Egypt 2009

  9. Panchromatic Light curves (from 30 s out to a few days post burst) Egypt 2009

  10. X-ray  NIR Light Curve Shallow optical rise Fo(t) t+0.5 Egypt 2009

  11. Spectral Energy Distributions: 1 , 2 Typical Band fit ox = 0.74 ± 0.03 Egypt 2009

  12. X-ray  NIR Light Curve Plateau at every  Egypt 2009

  13. SED 3: a single unextinguished PL! ox = 0.79 ±0.01 Egypt 2009

  14. Decay and late-time red Bump (at 1 day) Egypt 2009

  15. At 1 day it got redder! Red bump o = 1.05 ± 0.06 Egypt 2009

  16. -Did you measure z?-Yes, we did. Egypt 2009

  17. NOT: absorption spectrum z = 1.51 Taken at t=46 min Egypt 2009

  18. Multi-band simultaneous Modeling F(t)  t- 1 -0.6 2 0.15 3 1.1 4 3.5 F(t)  t- 1 -0.4 2 2.0 t1 600 s t2 34 ks Egypt 2009

  19. Main Properties: Summary • Soft, long 4-pulsed event. • X-ray steep decay is high-latitude emission of the last pulse  end of the prompt emission • Long plateau (typical X-rays, not so much in optical), single PL spectrum with almost no dust: Av<0.02 • Rise-plateau-decay is ACHROMATIC • Red bump at 1 day Egypt 2009

  20. Interpretation(s) Egypt 2009

  21. Interpretation(s) • Does the optical rise mark the afterglow onset? No, too slow! • Achromatic evolution  geometry  jet(s) • How many jets? • With just one jet, red bump is the reverse shock of a late energy injection episode. • 2 is also OK (e.g. see 080319B), but more contrived! Mind Okkham’s razor! Egypt 2009

  22. Off-axis jet obs  2 0 , (0 few degrees) Granot et al. 2005 Egypt 2009

  23. Why does the Sphynx look so tiny? Maybe you’re an off-axis observer… Egypt 2009

More Related