Litcius/Paper detail

Evolution of the afterglow optical spectral shape of GRB 201015A in the first hour: evidence for dust destruction

Toktarkhan Komesh, B. Grossan, Zhanat Maksut, Ernazar Abdikamalov, M. Krugov, George F. Smoot

2023Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT Instruments, such as the ROTSE, TORTORA, Pi of the Sky, MASTER-net, and others have recorded single-band optical flux measurements of gamma-ray bursts starting as early as ∼ 10 s after gamma-ray trigger. The earliest measurements of optical spectral shape have been made only much later, typically on hour time-scales, never starting less than a minute after trigger, until now. Beginning only 58 s after theSwift BAT triggered on GRB201015A, we observed a sharp rise in optical flux to a peak, followed by a power law temporal decay, ∝ t−0.81 ± 0.03. Flux was measured simultaneously in three optical bands, g′, r′, and i′, using our Burst Simultaneous Three-channel Imager on the Nazarbayev University Transient Telescope at Assy-Turgen Astrophysical Observatory telescope. Our data during the decay show strong colour evolution from red to blue, with a change in the optical log slope of +0.72 ± 0.14; during this time the X-ray log slope remained constant. We did not find evidence for a two-component jet structure or a transition from reverse to forward shock or a prompt emission component that would explain this change in slope. We find that the majority of the optical spectral slope evolution is consistent with a monotonic decay of extinction, evidence of dust destruction. Assuming a constant source spectral slope and an Small Magellanic Cloud-like extinction curve, we derive a change in the local extinction $A_\mathrm{v}^\mathrm{local}$ from ∼0.8 mag to 0.3 mag in ∼2500 s. This work shows that significant information about the early emission phase is being missed without such early observations with simultaneous multiband instruments.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsAfterglowAstrophysicsExtinction (optical mineralogy)Flux (metallurgy)Gamma-ray burstTelescopeSpectral slopeLight curveObservatorySkyJet (fluid)Cosmic distance ladderSpectral shape analysisShock (circulatory)AstronomySpectral lineOpticsGalaxyRedshiftInternal medicineThermodynamicsMetallurgyMaterials scienceMedicineGamma-ray bursts and supernovaeStellar, planetary, and galactic studiesAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations