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GSFC. Multi-Messenger GRB Astrophysics. Michael Stamatikos. Center for Cosmology and AstroParticle Physics (CCAPP) Fellow The Ohio State University (OSU) Michael.Stamatikos-1@nasa.gov The Inaugural CCAPP Symposium 2009 The Ohio State University Department of Physics October 12, 2009.
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GSFC Multi-Messenger GRB Astrophysics Michael Stamatikos Center for Cosmology and AstroParticle Physics (CCAPP) Fellow The Ohio State University (OSU) Michael.Stamatikos-1@nasa.gov The Inaugural CCAPP Symposium 2009 The Ohio State University Department of Physics October 12, 2009
Overview • Prompt • Afterglow I. GRB Electromagnetic Emission II. GRB Satellite Missions III. Neutrino Astronomy IV. Summary & Future Outlook • Swift (BAT, XRT & UVOT) • Fermi (LAT & GBM) • Correlative observations of GRBs • Fireball phenomenology & GRB Neutrinos • Discrete Neutrino flux • IceCube/ANTARES/NESTOR/KM3NET • Decade of science synergy
Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs): Prompt Emission • GRBs are unique, varying from burst to burst and class to class (short, long, X-ray rich, non-triggered). • Super-Eddington luminosities imply relativistic expansion. • Millisecond temporal variability implies compact objects R ≤ 2G2cDt. • Compactness problem resolved via ~100 ≤ GBulk≤ ~1000, ensuring transparent optical depth to observed g-ray photons, i.e. tgg≤ 1. AMANDA-II IceCube ANTARES /NESTOR KM3NET Briggs et al., ApJ 459: 40 (1996) “Short” GRBs are “hard” BATSE GRBs T90 (seconds)≡ Time required to accumulate from 5% to 95% of total counts in 50-350 keV band. Number of Bursts Number of Bursts Durations span 6 orders of magnitude! “Long” GRBs are “soft” “Long” GRBs ~1301 s “Short” GRBs ~0.02 s Number of Bursts T90 (seconds) Kouveliotou et al., ApJ 413: 101 (1993)
GRBs: Multi-Wavelength EM Afterglows Spectroscopically observed Doppler redshifts from optical transient (OT) afterglows. Isotropic Emission Beamed Emission Isotropic Emission: ~ 1 GRB/Day → RGRBiso~ 0.5 GRB/(Gpc3·yr). Beamed (Jet) Emission: Corrections → RGRBiso·(4/Ωb) sr and Egiso·(Ωb/4) sr. Where: Wb ≡ Beaming solid angle (sr).
“Swifts fly expertly on their first try. Regardless of their introduction to flight, all young are adept at it soon after they take their initial leap.” – National Geographic Society Boeing Delta II expendable launch vehicle ignition blasted NASA's Swift spacecraft from Complex 17A, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, FL on Nov. 20 at 12:16:00.611 p.m. EST in 2004.
The Swift MIDEX Mission BAT UVOT XRT • Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) 15-150 keV • Coded array of 32,768 CdZnTe detectors. • Sensitivity~ 10-8 ergs/cm2/sec • Detects ~100 GRBs per year • Energy resolution ~7 keV • PSF = 17’, 1-4 arcmin positions • X-Ray Telescope (XRT) 0.2-10 keV • Arcsec positions 23.6”x 23.6” FOV • Sensitivity ~2x10-14 ergs/cm2/s • 1 mcrab in 104 sec • CCD spectroscopy • (UVOT) UV/Optical Telescope • Sub-arcsec imaging, 17”x17” FOV • Grism spectroscopy • 24th mag sensitivity (1000 sec) • 170 nm - 600 nm, 6 colors • Sensitivity~ B=24 in white light in 1000 s Autonomous re-pointing, DQ = 50 < ~75 s, Orbit of 600 km x 21 inclination. XRT Image < 90 s UVOT Image GRB Triggers BAT T< 300 sec T < 10 sec sR < ~4 arcmin BAT Error Circle
Temporal Decay of Afterglows: XRT & UVOT GRB 050525A ~400 Swift GRBs 95% with XRT @ T < 200 ks ~60% with optical (UVOT + ground) ~10% Short GRBs Gehrels et al., New Journal of Physics 9:37 (2007) Fluxes decrease by orders of magnitude in first hours! • Afterglow Curves, Breaks, Flares, etc. • SGRB Redshift within elliptical galaxy • SGRB with extended soft emission • Over 133 Swift GRBs have redshifts. • GRB 090423 z ~ 8.0! (GCN 9215), i.e. ~85 Gpc or ~ 13 Gyr look back time. UVOT XRT Over ¾ of all GRB x-ray afterglows and redshift are based upon Swift bursts! < z > = 2.3 Number 0.001 0.01 0.1 1 10 Redshift
Large Area Telescope (LAT) GLAST Burst Monitor (GBM) Fermi (LAT & GBM) • Large Area Telescope(LAT) - < 20 MeV to > 300 GeV - Field of View (FOV) ~ 2.5 sr • GLAST Burst Monitor (GBM) - 8 keV – 30 MeV • 12 Sodium Iodide (NaI) Scintillation Detectors • Energy Range: • 8 keV – 1 MeV • Wide FOV (~8 sr) • Onboard Burst Trigger • 2 Bismuth Germanate (BGO) Scintillation detectors • Energy Range: • 0.15 – 30 MeV • Provides important overlap with LAT energy range.
Correlative Observations: Mutual Science Benefit! BATSE Epeak Distribution Y. Kaneko et al 2006, ApJS 166, 298 Comparison of Effective Areas 12 NaI (8 keV to 1 MeV) 2 BGO (0.15 to 30 MeV) LAT (20 MeV to >300 GeV) Stamatikos arXiv:0904.2755 • BAT increases GBM’s ~20-100 keV effective area by a factor of ~ 3. • Most GRBs have Epeak above BAT energy range. BAT-GBM GRBs↑ Epeaks. • BAT localization precision ~2-3 orders of magnitude better, ↑ follow-up (z). • Test validity of Epeak-Eiso redshift relationships (~35% Swift GRBs have z). • Broad-band spectral/temporal evolution ~ 6 energy decades (keV-GeV) for BAT-GBM, and ~11 energy decades for UVOT/XRT/BAT/GBM/LAT!! Has been realized in GRB 090510: LAT/GBM (GCN 9334/9336) and BAT/XRT/UVOT (GCN 9331).
BAT-GBM Joint Spectral Fit of GRB 080810 Left plate: Swift-BAT light curve for GRB 080810 with T0 = 13:10:12.3 UTC. Blue line indicates Swift slew-time. Red and green lines indicate 1st and 2nd joint fit interval, respectively. Center plate: Joint Swift-BAT/Fermi-GBM energy spectral fit for 1st interval, with fit parameters of α ~ 0.94 (+0.13, -0.15) and Epeak ~ 674 (+493, -237) keV (χ2/dof~1.33). Right plate: Joint fit for 2nd interval, resulting in fit parameters of α ~ 1.15 (+0.09, -0.10) and Epeak ~ 406 (+189, -106) keV (χ2/dof~1.15). Both intervals were best fit via a Comptonized model. Although consistent within their error bars, the 2nd (brighter) interval provides a better Epeak constraint . BAT-GBM Inter-calibration has ~50 common GRBs. Joint analysis is in preparation.
Magnetic Field Electron Low-Energy Photon -ray Electron -ray Synchrotron Radiation Self-Compton Scattering Prompt -ray emission of GRB is due to non-thermal processes such as electron synchrotron radiation or self-Compton scattering. --- The Fireball Phenomenology: GRB-n Connection GRB Prompt Emission (Temporal) Light Curve • Shock variability is a unique “finger-print” reflected in the complexity of the GRB time profile. • Implies compact object. Counts/sec Time (seconds) External Shocks Multi-wavelength Afterglows Span EM Spectrum Internal Shocks -ray e- p+ Optical X-ray Radio Prompt GRB Emission Afterglow E 1051 – 1054 ergs Optical Afterglow Radio Afterglow Spatial & temporal coincidence with prompt GRB emission R < 108 cm R 1014 cm T 3 x 103 seconds Spectral Fit Parameters R 1018 cm T 3 x 1016 seconds Ag, a, b, egb, egP Prompt GRB Photon Energy Spectrum – Characterized by the “Band Function” Photomeson interactions involving relativistically ( 300) shock-accelerated protons (Ep 1016 eV) and synchrotron gamma-ray photons (E 250 keV) in the fireball wind yield high-energy muonic neutrinos (E 1014 – 1015 eV).
Fireball Phenomenology: GRBs & n’s en(eV)ArrivalAstrophysical Mechanism/Comments 107 Before Progenitor Collapse/Merger 109 – 1010 Before Baryonic (n, p) Longitudinal decoupling 1012 - ≤ 1014 Before “Precursor” (pp/pg) 1014 – 1015 During Prompt (Photomeson/internal shocks) 1017-1018 After Afterglow (Photomeson/External shocks) • Fireball Phenomenology + Relativistic Hadronic Acceleration Neutrinos. • “Smoking gun” signature of hadronic acceleration cosmic rays • Assuming GRBs were CR accelerators Diffuse flux prediction. • AMANDA 1 PeV Diffuse Flux Upper Limits: TeV-PeV muon neutrinos spatio-temporal coincidence “Background free” search Razzaque, Meszaros & Waxman PRD 69 023001 (2004) Stamatikos, M. et al., AIP Conference Proceedings 727, 146-149 (2004) Waxman, E. Physical Review Letters 75, 386-389 (1995) Stamatikos et al. astro-ph/0510336 Waxman & Bahcall, Phys. Rev. D 59 023002 Achterberg et al., ApJ 664: 397 (2007) Achterberg et al., ApJ 674: 357 (2008)
Motivation for Discrete Approach • Diffuse flux methodology All GRBs described by same energy spectrum • Based upon average values for observables contradicts observations. • Distributions: • 1. Span orders of magnitude, • 2. Differ from burst to burst • 3. Class to class, and are • 4. Effected by selection effects. 5 orders of magnitude Few GRBs produce detectable signal • Fluctuations enhance neutrino production, e.g. GRB 941017. • EM variance neutrino variance. Halzen & Hooper ApJ 527, L93-L96 (1999) Alverez-Muniz, Halzen & Hooper Phys. Rev. D 62, (2000) • GRB030329 Case study. Stamatikos et al. astro-ph/0510336 Guetta et al., Astroparticle Physics 20 (2004) 429-455
Parameterization of Muon Neutrino Spectrum Neutrino Flux Models Model 1: Discrete Isotropic Model 2: Discrete Jet Model 3: Average Isotropic Neutrino spectrum is expected to trace the photon spectrum. Stamatikos et al. astro-ph/0510336 Guetta et al., Astroparticle Physics 20, 429-455 (2004)
Conclusions • Science Synergy: Swift-Fermi affords spectral & temporal evolution analysis over an unprecedented 11 energy decades (UVOTLAT)! • Expect ~1-3 BAT-GBM GRBs/month (~3217/year). • Can constrain/determine Epeakfor all coincident bursts, use redshift to determine burst luminosity and test empirical redshift relations. • Facilitate multi-messenger searches, e.g. neutrino astronomy via IceCube/ANTARES/NESTOR and KM3NET. (See Stamatikos et al 2009, Astro2010 Decadal Whitepaper.)