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Stockholm 1/9/2006 GLAST Collaboration meeting GRB symposium. GRBs and cosmology. Ghirlanda Giancarlo INAF- Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera. G. Ghisellini, C. Firmani, D. Lazzati, V. Avila-Reese, L. Nava, M. Nardini, F. Tavecchio. F(). Prompt emission spectrum. GRB Peak Energy
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Stockholm 1/9/2006 GLAST Collaboration meeting GRB symposium GRBs and cosmology Ghirlanda Giancarlo INAF- Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera G. Ghisellini, C. Firmani, D. Lazzati, V. Avila-Reese, L. Nava, M. Nardini, F. Tavecchio
F() Prompt emission spectrum GRB Peak Energy Epeak (i.e. where most of power comes out) Eiso = 4 dL(z)2 F(E,z,…) dE 1+z E
Peak energy – Isotropic energy Correlation 9+2 BeppoSAX GRBs Epeak Eiso0.5 Amati et al. 2002 Epeak(1+z) Rest Frame Eiso
+ 21 GRBs (Batse, Hete-II, Integral) Ghirlanda, Ghisellini, Lazzati 2004 Amati 2006 (most recent update) Epeak Eiso0.5 X2=357/28 Epeak(1+z) Eiso
The Skeptic list 1) Large dispersion 2) Presence of 2 outliers 3) Possible selection effects Ep-Eiso
Huge isotropic equivalent energy! Assume Isotropy GRB typical Fluence (i.e. time int. flux) is 10-8 – 10-4 erg/cm2 (1keV – 10 MeV) GRB Global (isotropic) energetics 42 GRBs with z
Afterglow light curve presents achromatic break Evidence that the GRB outflow is collimated within a jet with a certain opening angle AG break time Jet opening angle GRB 990510 – Israel et al. 1999
+ 21 GRBs (Batse, Hete-II, Integral) ? 1-cos(q) Ghirlanda, Ghisellini, Lazzati 2004 Epeak Eiso0.5 Epeak(1+z)
Peak energy vs. True energy cr2=1.27 Epeak Etrue0.7 Ghirlanda, Ghisellini & Lazzati 2004 Epeak(1+z) Epeak(1+z)
The Skeptic list Hidden variable jet (also sample variance) 1) Large dispersion 2) Presence of 2 outliers 3) Possible selection effects Ep-Eiso
Outliers wrt the Ep-Eiso correlation view GRBs observed off-axis jet (Ramirez-Ruiz 2005, Yamazaki et al. 2004; Eichler & Levinson 2005) incident transmitted Klein-Nishina absorption t(E) Ghisellini et al. 2006 Pb: most luminous events (but @ z<0.1!!) Presence of absorbing material (Boettcher 1997, Dermer 1998, Barbiellini et al. 2004) incident Pb: Large amount of material may influence the afterglow (accel). + should explain why only in 2 cases transmitted incident transmitted
Outliers wrt the Ep-Eiso correlation GRB 060218 SN 2006dh Z=0.033 (0.008 & 0.106) Eiso=9e49 erg Ep=6 keV See also NEWS & VIEWS at the end of the presentation! GRB 060218
060218 Outliers wrt the Ep-Eiso correlation 060218 If no XRT data (only BAT) Ep=50 keV ; Eiso=2.e49 erg It would have been the 3rd outlier!! 0-2600 sec 2000-2600 sec Strong H2S spectral evolution + Long duration (3000 sec) 0-200 sec Considerable soft X-ray emission i.e. lower Ep and larger Eiso Ghisellini et al. 2006
Outliers wrt the Ep-Eiso correlation Dust scattering halo reconstructed flux Integral
Outliers wrt the Ep-Eiso correlation Scattering material Spectral evolution
The Skeptic list Hidden variable (jet) (also sample variance) 1) Large dispersion 2) Presence of 2 outliers 3) Possible selection effects Strong spectral evolution (or abs. material) Ep-Eiso Debate: Nakar & Piran 2005 + Band et al. 2005 vs Ghirlanda et al. 2005 + Bosnjak et al. 2006
Selection effects of the Ep-Eiso (Eg) correlation TEST: 443 Long Batse GRBs with (independent) Pseudo-z estimated from the Lag-Lum correlation Ghirlanda et al. 2005 Pseudo-z GRBs define a correlation in the Ep-Eiso plane which is consistent with the same correlation found with the few spec-z GRBs (see also angle distribution) Recently the update of the sample to 41 (Amati et al. 2006) makes the corr more roboust.
The Skeptic list Hidden variable (jet) (also sample variance) 1) Large dispersion 2) Presence of 2 outliers 3) Possible selection effects Strong spectral evolution (or abs. material) Ep-Eiso Consistent with large burst population. If any sel effect is only the angle (as expected)
Perlmutter 1998 Similar to Supernovae Ia “Stretching”: the slower the brighter
E=1051 erg Luminosity distance Stretch-lum (SNIa) Ep-Eg correlation (GRB) Luminosity distance redshift E=1051 erg Luminosity distance The correlation reduces the scatter of GRBs in the Hubble Diagram GRBs can be used as cosmological RULERS ! redshift
Homogeneous density Nava L. et al. 2006
Wind density profile n=r-2 Linear! “Lorentz invariant” Ng~const~1057 Nava et al. 2006
Linear is even better for cosmology Ghirlanda et al. 2006 A&A
The Skeptic list Hidden variable (jet) (also sample variance) 1) Large dispersion 2) Presence of 2 outliers 3) Possible selection effects Strong spectral evolution (or abs. material) Ep-Eiso Consistent with large burst population jet Ep-Eg 6) Correlations are model dependent std cndl
A completely empirical correlation between prompt (Ep, Eiso) and afterglow properties (tbreak) (Liang & Zhang 2005) Nava L. et al. 2006
Model dependent: uniform jet + homogeneous density Model dependent: uniform jet + wind density Through simple algebra it can be verified that the model dependent correlations are consistent with the empirical correlation! (Nava et al. 2006) EMPIRICAL
… still not convinced ? … A new correlation between Liso, Ep, T0.45 Good fit Consistent with other corr ONLY PROMPT EMISSION PROPERTIES Firmani et al. 2006
Cosmological Constraints with the Liso-Ep-T0.45 correlation 156 SN Ia 156 SN Ia 19 GRBs 19 GRBs Firmani et al. 2006a
115 SN Ia GRBs + Legacy SNIa 19 GRBs + 115 SN Ia 68% CL 68% CL GRB+SN prefer CDM 68% CL Firmani et al. 2006b
The Skeptic list Hidden variable (jet) (also sample variance) 1) Large dispersion 2) Presence of 2 outliers 3) Possible selection effects Strong spectral evolution (or abs. material) Ep-Eiso Consistent with large burst population jet Ep-Eg 6) Correlations are model dependent 2 model independent correlations testify the possible use of GRBs as standard candles std cndl
Model dependent correlations GRBs can be used as standard candles! Model independent correlations
News & Views:SN shock breakout in GRB060218/SN2006aj ? UV ~ n2 X-ray black body SN shock breakout GRB060218/SN2006aj XRT UVOT BUT If 1 single UV-X BB L>1048erg/sec Erad>1051 erg [Ekin(SN)~1051 erg] If UV-BB is SN shock breakout Vphot>c If X-BB is SN shock breakout Vphot~3000 km/s (too small) Ghisellini, Ghirlanda & Tavecchio 2006 MNRAS submitted (astro-ph/0608555)
GRB060218/SN2006aj Opt-UV to X-ray emission is Synchrotron-Self Compton (with self absorption) up to 105 sec GG,GG,FT astro-ph/0608555
The Thermal Black Body in X-ray (20-50% of the tot flux up to 7000 sec) could be: 1) The leftover of the fireball accel. 2) The conversion of internal energy (e.g. B reconn.) below the photospheric radius) GG,GG,FT astro-ph/0608555
… what about the future? 150 Fake GRBs Z(SFR), tbreak,Ep,Eiso Following the wind Ep-Eg correlation Ghirlanda et al. 2006
VERY PROMISING!! Ghirlanda et al.2006 A&A Ghirlanda et al. 2006 JOP Review, GRB Special Issue
jet The Skeptic list Hidden variable (jet) (also sample variance) 1) Large dispersion 2) Presence of 2 outliers 3) Possible selection effects Strong spectral evolution (or abs. material) Ep-Eiso Consistent with large burst population 4) Jet breaks are not achromatic 5) No preference for wind from obs Ep-Eg 6) Correlations are model dependent std cndl
Complex light curve with many, superimposed, flares Jet break is a smooth transition Still computed with fixed micro-physical parameters Falcone et al. 2006 Cusumano et al. 2006
The Skeptic list Hidden variable (jet) (also sample variance) 1) Large dispersion 2) Presence of 2 outliers 3) Possible selection effects Strong spectral evolution (or abs. material) Ep-Eiso Consistent with large burst population jet 4) Jet breaks are not achromatic 5) No preference for wind from obs Complex X-ray (see also point 8) Ep-Eg 6) Correlations are model dependent std cndl
The Skeptic list Hidden variable (jet) (also sample variance) 1) Large dispersion 2) Presence of 2 outliers 3) Possible selection effects Strong spectral evolution (or abs. material) Ep-Eiso Consistent with large burst population jet 4) Jet breaks are not achromatic 5) No preference for wind from obs Complex X-ray (see also point 8) Ep-Eg Variable micro-physics 6) Correlations are model dependent std cndl
, Surf. Jet half opening angle Relativistc beaming: emitting surface 1/ Log(F) Jet break Log(t) Jet effect >> 1/ 1/
If angle distribution is peaked Small q, brighter
with z with pseudo-z Ghirlanda et al. 2005, MNRAS
… and its evolution (even darker) Flat Universe: Wtot=1,WM=0.27 P=(w0+w’z)rc2 Firmani, Ghisellini, Ghirlanda & Avila-Reese, 2005