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Multiwavelength View of the Close-by GRB 190829A Sheds Light on Gamma-Ray Burst Physics

O. S. Salafia, M. E. Ravasio, Jun Yang, Tao An, M. Orienti, G. Ghirlanda, Lara Nava, M. Giroletti, P. Mohan, Riccardo Spinelli, Yingkang Zhang, B. Marcote, Giuseppe Cimò, Xue-Feng Wu, Zhixuan Li

2022The Astrophysical Journal Letters50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract We monitored the position of the close-by (about 370 Mpc) gamma-ray burst GRB 190829A, which originated from a massive star collapse, through very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) observations with the European VLBI Network and the Very Long Baseline Array, carrying out a total of nine observations between 9 and 117 days after the gamma-ray burst at 5 and 15 GHz, with a typical resolution of a few milliarcseconds. From a state-of-the art analysis of these data, we obtained valuable limits on the source size and expansion rate. The limits are in agreement with the size evolution entailed by a detailed modeling of the multiwavelength light curves with a forward-plus-reverse shock model, which agrees with the observations across almost 18 orders of magnitude in frequency (including the HESS data at TeV photon energies) and more than 4 orders of magnitude in time. Thanks to the multiwavelength, high-cadence coverage of the afterglow, inherent degeneracies in the afterglow model are broken to a large extent, allowing us to capture some unique physical insights; we find a low prompt emission efficiency of ≲10 −3 , a low fraction of relativistic electrons in the forward shock downstream χ e < 13% (90% credible level), and a rapid decay of the magnetic field in the reverse shock downstream after the shock crossing. While our model assumes an on-axis jet, our VLBI astrometry is not sufficiently tight as to exclude any off-axis viewing angle, but we can exclude the line of sight to have been more than ∼2° away from the border of the gamma-ray-producing region based on compactness arguments.

Topics & Concepts

Very-long-baseline interferometryPhysicsGamma-ray burstAfterglowAstrophysicsShock (circulatory)AstrometryLine-of-sightVery Long Baseline ArrayAstronomyActive galactic nucleusGalaxyStarsMedicineInternal medicineGamma-ray bursts and supernovaeAstrophysical Phenomena and ObservationsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena