Ústav technické a experimentální fyziky Institute of Experimental and Applied Physics

Multiwavelength Observations of GRB 110731A: GeV Emission from Onset to Afterglow

NázevTitle
Multiwavelength Observations of GRB 110731A: GeV Emission from Onset to AfterglowMultiwavelength Observations of GRB 110731A: GeV Emission from Onset to Afterglow
Druh výsledkuResult type
Článek v časopiseJournal article
AutořiAuthors
M. Ackermann, M. Ajello, K. Asano, L. Baldini, G. Barbiellini, R. Filgas
DOIDOI
10.1088/0004-637X/763/2/71
Časopis / citaceJournal / citation
Astrophysical Journal. 2013, 763(2), ISSN 0004-637X.
RokYear
2013
JazykLanguage
eng
WoSWoS
000313869800002
ScopusScopus
2-s2.0-84872690981
RIVRIV
RIV/68407700:21670/13:00202168!RIV14-MSM-21670___
ProjektProject
Institucionální podpora na rozvoj výzkumné org.Institucionální podpora na rozvoj výzkumné org.

AbstraktAbstract

We report on the multiwavelength observations of the bright, long gamma-ray burst GRB 110731A, by the Fermi and Swift observatories, and by the MOA and GROND optical telescopes. The analysis of the prompt phase reveals that GRB 110731A shares many features with bright Large Area Telescope bursts observed by Fermi during the first three years on-orbit: a light curve with short time variability across the whole energy range during the prompt phase, delayed onset of the emission above 100 MeV, extra power-law component and temporally extended high-energy emission. In addition, this is the first GRB for which simultaneous GeV, X-ray, and optical data are available over multiple epochs beginning just after the trigger time and extending for more than 800 s, allowing temporal and spectral analysis in different epochs that favor emission from the forward shock in a wind-type medium. The observed temporally extended GeV emission is most likely part of the high-energy end of the afterglow emission. Both the single-zone pair transparency constraint for the prompt signal and the spectral and temporal analysis of the forward-shock afterglow emission independently lead to an estimate of the bulk Lorentz factor of the jet Γ ~ 500-550.

We report on the multiwavelength observations of the bright, long gamma-ray burst GRB 110731A, by the Fermi and Swift observatories, and by the MOA and GROND optical telescopes. The analysis of the prompt phase reveals that GRB 110731A shares many features with bright Large Area Telescope bursts observed by Fermi during the first three years on-orbit: a light curve with short time variability across the whole energy range during the prompt phase, delayed onset of the emission above 100 MeV, extra power-law component and temporally extended high-energy emission. In addition, this is the first GRB for which simultaneous GeV, X-ray, and optical data are available over multiple epochs beginning just after the trigger time and extending for more than 800 s, allowing temporal and spectral analysis in different epochs that favor emission from the forward shock in a wind-type medium. The observed temporally extended GeV emission is most likely part of the high-energy end of the afterglow emission. Both the single-zone pair transparency constraint for the prompt signal and the spectral and temporal analysis of the forward-shock afterglow emission independently lead to an estimate of the bulk Lorentz factor of the jet Γ ~ 500-550.