Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 1 GRB results from the Swift mission Phil Evans, Paul O'Brien and the Swift team.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Lecture 5: Gamma-Ray Bursts Light extinction:. GRBs are brief flashes of soft -ray radiation ( 100 keV), discovered in the 1970s, the origin of which.
Advertisements

GRB : a canonical fake short burst L. Caito, M.G. Bernardini, C.L. Bianco, M.G. Dainotti, R. Guida, R. Ruffini. 3 rd Stueckelberg Workshop July 8–18,
The Science of Gamma-Ray Bursts: caution, extreme physics at play Bruce Gendre ARTEMIS.
Bruce Gendre Osservatorio di Roma / ASI Science Data Center Recent activities from the TAROT/Zadko network.
Yun-Wei YU 俞云伟 June 22, 2010, Hong Kong. Outline  Background  Implications from the shallow decay afterglows of GRBs  A qualitative discussion on magnetar.
Refusing to Go Quietly: Gamma-Ray Bursts and Their Progenitors Andy Fruchter STScI Hubble Science Briefing 5 Dec
Can a double component outflow explain the X-ray and Optical Lightcurves of GRBs? Massimiliano De Pasquale 1 P. Evans 2, S. Oates 1, M. Page 1, S. Zane.
GRB afterglows as background sources for WHIM absorption studies A. Corsi, L. Colasanti, A. De Rosa, L. Piro IASF/INAF - Rome WHIM and Mission Opportunities.
A high z (z~6.3) GRB-- GRB Reported by Bubu 2006 Mar.17.
Constraining the Properties of Dark Energy Using GRBs D. Q. Lamb (U. Chicago) High-Energy Transient ExplorerSwift Department of Astronomy, Nanjing University.
Gamma-Ray Bursts: The Most Brilliant Events in the Universe D. Q. Lamb (U. Chicago) PHYSICS for the THIRD MILLENNIUM: II Huntsville, AL 5–7 April 2005.
Gamma-ray Bursts Presentation by Aung Sis Naing. A little bit about gamma-rays.
Swift Identification of the host galaxy of Swift short GRBs by the Chandra sub-arcsecond position T. Sakamoto, N. Gehrels, E. Troja, J. Norris, S. Barthelmy,
The Extreme Universe of Gamma-ray Astronomy Professor Lynn Cominsky Department of Physics and Astronomy Sonoma State University.
Gamma-ray Astronomy (The Short Story…). The Big Picture l Whole sky glows l Extreme environments l Probes of the Universe CGRO/EGRET All Sky Map.
Ehud Nakar California Institute of Technology Gamma-Ray Bursts and GLAST GLAST at UCLA May 22.
A burst of new ideas Nature Vol /28 December 2006 徐佩君 HEAR group meeting 12/
The Present and Future of GRB Cosmography Andrew S. Friedman (Harvard-CfA) & Joshua S. Bloom (Harvard-CfA / UC Berkeley)
All sources cited at end. 1. Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) are very short bursts of gamma rays from a distant point in space. They are believed to be associated.
The general theory of relativity is our most accurate description of gravitation Published by Einstein in 1915, this is a theory of gravity A massive object.
Gamma Ray Bursts and LIGO Emelie Harstad University of Oregon HEP Group Meeting Aug 6, 2007.
P. Price (U. of Hawaii) and many others Discovery and identification of the very high redshift afterglow of GRB J. B. Haislip, et al. astro-ph ,
Swift Observations of GRBs David Burrows The Pennsylvania State University.
Swift Nanjing GRB Conference Prompt Emission Properties of X-ray Flashes and Gamma-ray Bursts T. Sakamoto (CRESST/UMBC/GSFC)
The Transient Universe: AY 250 Spring 2007 Existing Transient Surveys: High Energy I: Gamma-Ray Bursts Geoff Bower.
3rd Potsdam Thinkshop Robotic Astronomy Gamma-ray burst optical follow-ups with robotic telescopes M.I. Andersen Gamma-ray burst optical follow-ups with.
COSMIC GAMMA-RAY BURSTS The Current Status Kevin Hurley UC Berkeley Space Sciences Laboratory.
Gamma-Ray Bursts: The Biggest Explosions Since the Big Bang Edo Berger.
Gamma-ray Bursts in the E-ELT era Rhaana Starling University of Leicester.
Gamma-Ray Bursts and Supernovae Tsinghua Transient Workshop 8 Nov 2012 Elena Pian INAF-Trieste Astronomical Observatory, Italy & Scuola Normale Superiore.
Swift Annapolis GRB Conference Prompt Emission Properties of Swift GRBs T. Sakamoto (CRESST/UMBC/GSFC) On behalf of Swift/BAT team.
Swift Kyoto GRB Conference BAT2 GRB Catalog Prompt Emission Properties of Swift GRBs T. Sakamoto (CRESST/UMBC/GSFC) on behalf of Swift/BAT.
01/02/2009Moriond th Rencontres de Moriond Very High Energy Phenomena in the Universe Why the Swift GRB redshift distribution is changing in time.
Rise and Fall of the X-ray flash : an off-axis jet? C.Guidorzi 1,2,3 on behalf of a large collaboration of the Swift, Liverpool and Faulkes Telescopes,
Recent Results and the Future of Radio Afterglow Observations Alexander van der Horst Astronomical Institute Anton Pannekoek University of Amsterdam.
COLLABORATORS: Dale Frail, Derek Fox, Shri Kulkarni, Fiona Harrisson, Edo Berger, Douglas Bock, Brad Cenko and Mansi Kasliwal.
The observations of GRB optical afterglow with 6-meter telescope: recent results and future plans T.A. Fatkhullin and SAO RAS follow-up team Nizhnij Arkhyz,
1 Short GRBs - and other recent developments in GRBs Tsvi Piran ( HU, Jerusalem) Dafne Guetta (Rome Obs.)
The Early Time Properties of GRBs : Canonical Afterglow and the Importance of Prolonged Central Engine Activity Andrea Melandri Collaborators : C.G.Mundell,
Short duration bursts are suspected of being (mostly) due to compact binary mergers Classical long bursts are associated with core collapse of some H-
Gamma-Ray Bursts observed by XMM-Newton Paul O’Brien X-ray and Observational Astronomy Group, University of Leicester Collaborators:- James Reeves, Darach.
1 John Nousek (Penn State University) ly Searching the Sky: The First Three Years of the Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Explorer III Cosmic Ray & Astrophysics School.
BH Astrophys. Ch3.6. Outline 1. Some basic knowledge about GRBs 2. Long Gamma Ray Bursts (LGRBs) - Why so luminous? - What’s the geometry? - The life.
Gamma-Ray Bursts Energy problem and beaming * Mergers versus collapsars GRB host galaxies and locations within galaxy Supernova connection Fireball model.
Gamma-Ray Bursts: Open Questions and Looking Forward Ehud Nakar Tel-Aviv University 2009 Fermi Symposium Nov. 3, 2009.
Mssl astrophysics group start Terribly hot stars. Liz Puchnarewicz Mullard Space Science Laboratory, UCL  -ray sources, missions.
Soltan Institute for Nuclear Studies Warsaw Probing the high-redshift Universe with Gamma-ray bursts M.I. Andersen Probing the high-redshift.
Study on Gamma-Ray Burst host galaxies in the TMT era Tetsuya Hashimoto (NAOJ) 1.
High energy Astrophysics Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 11. Gamma-ray bursts.
The nature of the longest gamma-ray bursts Andrew Levan University of Warwick.
Swift as a Rapid Wide Field Follow-up Instrument John Nousek & Jamie Kennea Penn State University Phil Evans University of Leicester International Workshop.
06/02/2009Diego Götz - The SVOM Mission1 La Thuile Italy 06/ th Rencontres de Moriond SVOM A new mission for Gamma-Ray Bursts Studies Diego Götz.
The GRB Luminosity Function in the light of Swift 2-year data by Ruben Salvaterra Università di Milano-Bicocca.
Gamma-Ray Burst Working Group Co-conveners: Abe Falcone, Penn State, David A. Williams, UCSC,
Gamma-Ray Bursts. Short (sub-second to minutes) flashes of gamma- rays, for ~ 30 years not associated with any counterparts in other wavelength bands.
(Review) K. Ioka (Osaka U.) 1.Short review of GRBs 2.HE  from GRB 3.HE  from Afterglow 4.Summary.
A relation to estimate the redshift from the X-ray afterglow light curve Bruce Gendre (IASF-Roma/INAF) & Michel Boër (OHP/CNRS)
Stochastic wake field particle acceleration in Gamma-Ray Bursts Barbiellini G., Longo F. (1), Omodei N. (2), Giulietti D., Tommassini P. (3), Celotti A.
Radio afterglows of Gamma Ray Bursts Poonam Chandra National Centre for Radio Astrophysics - Tata Institute of Fundamental Research Collaborator: Dale.
A complete sample of long bright Swift GRBs: correlation studies Paolo D’Avanzo INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera S. Campana (OAB) S. Covino (OAB)
Gamma Ray Bursts IV : Observational Techniques and some results Andrea Melandri INAF – Astronomical Observatory of Brera.
Classification of Gamma-Ray Bursts: an observational review Paolo D’Avanzo INAF – Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera.
Gamma-ray bursts Tomasz Bulik CAM K, Warsaw. Outline ● Observations: prompt gamma emission, afterglows ● Theoretical modeling ● Current challenges in.
Gamma-Ray Bursts Please press “1” to test your transmitter.
The Mysterious Burst After the Short Burst Jay Norris Brief History, Overview, Central Questions Spectral lag distributions (long & short GRBs) Pulse width.
The Swift GRB Observatory
Ariel Majcher Gamma-ray bursts and GRB080319B XXIVth IEEE-SPIE Joint Symposium on Photonics, Web Engineering, Electronics for Astronomy and High Energy.
Gamma Ray Burst Discoveries with the Swift Mission
GRB-Supernova observations: State of the art
Swift observations of X-Ray naked GRBs
Presentation transcript:

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 1 GRB results from the Swift mission Phil Evans, Paul O'Brien and the Swift team.

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 2 GRBs – a brief history Originally discovered by the Vela satellites, monitoring for violations of the nuclear test ban. Later BATSE onboard Compton observed thousands of bursts, isotropically distributed on the sky (cosmological in origin?)‏ Vela/CGRO

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 3 GRBs – a brief history Originally discovered by the Vela satellites, monitoring for violations of the nuclear test ban. Later BATSE onboard Compton observed thousands of bursts, isotropically distributed on the sky (cosmological in origin?)‏ Vela/CGRO

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 4 GRBs – a brief history “T90” - the shortest time to encompass 90% of the Gamma-ray fluence, is a standard measure of duration. NOTE: This depends on instrument sensitivity and bandpass. BATSE found a strongly double-peaked distribution of durations. Duration

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 5 GRBs – a brief history GRB was detected some hours post-trigger by BeppoSAX. Further afterglow discoveries and redshifts confirmed the cosmological nature of GRBs. Long GRBs appeared to be associated with star forming galaxies. GRB preceeded a supernova (SN1998bw) at the same location -> the same event. No short GRB afterglow was detected. Afterglows

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 6 GRBs – a brief history

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 7 Questions for Swift Do short GRBs have afterglows, and hence can we locate them more precisely? Can we pin down the progenitors? Are there new subclasses of GRBs? Can we find high-redshift bursts and study the early universe?

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 8 Enter Swift

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 9 Enter Swift

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 10 Swift BAT ( keV). Large (2 sr) field of view – detects bursts with arc min accuracy. And tells observers immediately. Swift automatically determines if it can view the GRB, and if so, slews to it. XRT ( keV) and UVOT (~ Å ) begin observing typically within 100 s of the trigger. XRT can automatically detect afterglows, and downlinks limited data immediately. ~90% of BAT GRBs have promptly detected XRT afterglows. Details

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 11 Swift discoveries Currently >300 GRBs with arc second positions from Swift (more from optical follow-up). >100 Swift GRBs have redshifts (>70% of world total). Includes brightest GRB ever seen, and most distant one. Summary

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 12 Questions for Swift Do short GRBs have afterglows, and hence can we locate them more precisely? Are there new subclasses of GRBs? Can we pin down the progenitors? Can we find high-redshift bursts and study the early universe?

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 13 Swift discoveries GRB B was a short GRB discovered by Swift, with an X-ray afterglow reported 2:29 after the trigger. Short GRBs. VLT image Hjorth et al. Outskirts of an elliptical galaxy. Later sGRBs had optical afterglows too. Subsequently found in all galaxy types.

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 14 Questions for Swift Do short GRBs have afterglows, and hence can we locate them more precisely? Can we pin down the progenitors? Are there new subclasses of GRBs? Can we find high-redshift bursts and study the early universe?

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 15 Swift discoveries Short GRBs found in all types of galaxy – old population (compact merger/magnetar)‏ Long GRBs always found in star forming galaxies and regions – deaths of massive stars. Progenitors

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 16 Questions for Swift Do short GRBs have afterglows, and hence can we locate them more precisely? Can we pin down the progenitors? Are there new subclasses of GRBs? Can we find high-redshift bursts and study the early universe?

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 17 Swift discoveries Blurred the distinction between “short” and “long” bursts, and made it more detector-dependent. Short GRB with extended emission Barthelmy et al. 2005

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 18 Swift discoveries GRB and GRB were nearby, apparantly long GRBs, with no related supernova, down to deep limits. The GRB taxonomy is clearly more complex than previously thought. Maybe a new, progenitor-based classification is needed? Long GRBs with no SNe

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 19 Questions for Swift Do short GRBs have afterglows, and hence can we locate them more precisely? Can we pin down the progenitors? Are there new subclasses of GRBs? Can we find high-redshift bursts and study the early universe?

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 20 Swift discoveries 16 GRBs observed by Swift have z>3.5 9 have z>4, and 4 have z > 5 – a large, rapidly growing population of distant objects. GRB was at z=6.29 (Cusumano et al. 2007)‏ GRB was at z=6.7, and was a fainter-than-normal burst! (Greiner et al. 2009) High redshift bursts

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 21 Swift discoveries

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 22 Swift discoveries 2-m class telescopes should give reliable photo-z for many z>6 bursts. With GROND online, X-shooter under construction, and increasing numbers of small (ish) telescopes observing every GRB, the next high-z burst could be just round the corner.... High redshift bursts

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 23 Questions from Swift New mysteries Complex X-ray afterglows. X-ray flares Jet breaks? Why do the different types of GRB have such similar afterglows? Why is the ambient medium (apparently) constant-density, not WR-wind type environment? What are the microphysics parameters?

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 24 Swift discoveries

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 25 Swift discoveries

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 26 Swift discoveries

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 27 Swift discoveries Most X-ray afterglows don't show the simple power-law decay seen at late times. The “canonical” light curves has 3 phases: Complex X-ray light curves

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 28 Swift discoveries Prompt emission (internal shocks)‏

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 29 Swift discoveries Prompt emission (internal shocks)‏ High latitude emission

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 30 Swift discoveries

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 31 Swift discoveries Prompt emission (internal shocks)‏ High latitude emission

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 32 Swift discoveries Prompt emission (internal shocks)‏ High latitude emission “Normal” decay

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 33 Swift discoveries Prompt emission (internal shocks)‏ High latitude emission “Normal” decay Errrrr....

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 34 Swift discoveries Energy injection? (Zhang et al 2006). But it has to go on for ~1 day. Dust? [models light curves really well – Shao & Dai (2007). But not the spectra (Shen et al. 2009). Upscattered forward shock emission? Long-lived central engine (i.e. internal shock emission). And more.... Shallow decay phase

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 35 Swift discoveries Complex X-ray afterglows Evans et al. 2009

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 36 Questions from Swift New mysteries Complex X-ray afterglows. X-ray flares Jet breaks? Why do the different GRBs have such similar afterglows? Why is the ambient medium (apparently) constant- density? What are the microphysics parameters?

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 37 Swift discoveries

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 38 Swift discoveries

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 39 Questions from Swift New mysteries Complex X-ray afterglows. X-ray flares Jet breaks? Why do the different GRBs have such similar afterglows? Why is the ambient medium (apparently) constant- density? What are the microphysics parameters?

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 40 Swift discoveries Strong, achromatic light curve steepening was expected in most/all GRBs – it's now exciting if we think we've got one! They could be hidden (Curran et al. 2008), or we're not considering enough possibilities (Racusin et al. 2009)‏ Perhaps the jets are structured/complex, so breaks are not achromatic? (e.g. Oates et al. 2007, de Pasquale et al. 2008). Where are the jet breaks?

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 41 Swift discoveries Very bright – reached m v =5.3. GRB B

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 42 Swift discoveries Very bright – reached m v =5.3 GRB B Movie from Pi of the sky.

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 43 Swift discoveries Very bright – reached m v =5.3 z=0.9 If it were at the Galactic centre, it would appear as bright as the Sun! Bright in X-rays and Gamma-rays, but nothing like as extraordinary as in the optical. Implies a complex jet structure (Racusin et al. 2008, Nature). GRB B

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 44 Swift discoveries GRB B

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 45 Summary Swift has helped to answer some questions: Localised short GRBs Supported collapsar and compact merger progenitor models. Asked a load of new questions! What are the subtypes? How do we get X-ray afterglows? And flares? What is the jet structure?

Moriond – 1 st -8 th Feb 2009 – La Thuile, Italy. Page 46 Gratuitous plug All XRT light curves and spectra of GRBs are online, automatically produced/updated as soon as data are available: Swift observes non-GRBs too – you can propose ToO or GI observations of your favourite source(s). Don't want to do the data analysis? does it for you (Evans et al. arXiv ).