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Large-amplitude late-time radio variability in GRB 151027B

Large-amplitude late-time radio variability in GRB 151027B
Large-amplitude late-time radio variability in GRB 151027B

Context. Deriving physical parameters from gamma-ray burst (GRB) afterglow observations remains a challenge, even 20 years after the discovery of afterglows. The main reason for the lack of progress is that the peak of the synchrotron emission is in the sub-mm range, thus requiring radio observations in conjunction with X-ray/optical/near-infrared data in order to measure the corresponding spectral slopes and consequently remove the ambiguity with respect to slow vs. fast cooling and the ordering of the characteristic frequencies. Aims. We have embarked on a multifrequency, multi-epoch observing campaign to obtain sufficient data for a given GRB that allows us to test the simplest version of the fireball afterglow model. Methods. We observed GRB 151027B, the 1000th Swift-detected GRB, with GROND in the optical-near-IR, ALMA in the sub-millimeter, ATCA in the radio band; we combined this with public Swift/XRT X-ray data. Results. While some observations at crucial times only return upper limits or surprising features, the fireball model is narrowly constrained by our data set, and allows us to draw a consistent picture with a fully determined parameter set. Surprisingly, we find rapid, large-amplitude flux density variations in the radio band which are extreme not only for GRBs, but generally for any radio source. We interpret them as scintillation effects, though their extreme nature requires the scattering screen to be at a much smaller distance than usually assumed, multiple screens, or a combination of the two. Conclusions. The data are consistent with the simplest fireball scenario for a blast wave moving into a constant-density medium, and slow-cooling electrons. All fireball parameters are constrained at or better than a factor of 2, except for the density and the fraction of the energy in the magnetic field which has a factor of 10 uncertainty in both directions.

Gamma-ray burst: general, Gamma-ray burst: individual: GRB 151027B, Radiation mechanisms: non-thermal, Radio continuum: ISM, Techniques: photometric
0004-6361
Greiner, J.
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Bolmer, J.
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Wieringa, M.
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Van Der Horst, A. J.
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Petry, D.
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Schulze, S.
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Knust, F.
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De Bruyn, G.
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Krühler, T.
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Wiseman, P.
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Klose, S.
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Delvaux, C.
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Graham, J. F.
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Kann, D. A.
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Moin, A.
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Nicuesa-Guelbenzu, A.
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Schady, P.
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Schmidl, S.
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Schweyer, T.
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Tanga, M.
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Tingay, S.
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Van Eerten, H.
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Varela, K.
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Greiner, J.
d9bc880b-1515-4291-b794-dd81b4e28c86
Bolmer, J.
95320414-9c4c-4267-94f7-528e97ceed4c
Wieringa, M.
40c8d549-0b68-42be-9aff-648c569f7368
Van Der Horst, A. J.
efc664be-6cc0-4ccc-aa2a-61e651ce6ec5
Petry, D.
11a05370-96c5-464a-bbd5-833972634480
Schulze, S.
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Knust, F.
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De Bruyn, G.
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Krühler, T.
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Wiseman, P.
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Klose, S.
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Delvaux, C.
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Graham, J. F.
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Kann, D. A.
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Moin, A.
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Nicuesa-Guelbenzu, A.
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Schady, P.
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Schmidl, S.
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Schweyer, T.
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Tanga, M.
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Tingay, S.
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Van Eerten, H.
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Varela, K.
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Greiner, J., Bolmer, J., Wieringa, M., Van Der Horst, A. J., Petry, D., Schulze, S., Knust, F., De Bruyn, G., Krühler, T., Wiseman, P., Klose, S., Delvaux, C., Graham, J. F., Kann, D. A., Moin, A., Nicuesa-Guelbenzu, A., Schady, P., Schmidl, S., Schweyer, T., Tanga, M., Tingay, S., Van Eerten, H. and Varela, K. (2018) Large-amplitude late-time radio variability in GRB 151027B. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 614, [A29]. (doi:10.1051/0004-6361/201731755).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Context. Deriving physical parameters from gamma-ray burst (GRB) afterglow observations remains a challenge, even 20 years after the discovery of afterglows. The main reason for the lack of progress is that the peak of the synchrotron emission is in the sub-mm range, thus requiring radio observations in conjunction with X-ray/optical/near-infrared data in order to measure the corresponding spectral slopes and consequently remove the ambiguity with respect to slow vs. fast cooling and the ordering of the characteristic frequencies. Aims. We have embarked on a multifrequency, multi-epoch observing campaign to obtain sufficient data for a given GRB that allows us to test the simplest version of the fireball afterglow model. Methods. We observed GRB 151027B, the 1000th Swift-detected GRB, with GROND in the optical-near-IR, ALMA in the sub-millimeter, ATCA in the radio band; we combined this with public Swift/XRT X-ray data. Results. While some observations at crucial times only return upper limits or surprising features, the fireball model is narrowly constrained by our data set, and allows us to draw a consistent picture with a fully determined parameter set. Surprisingly, we find rapid, large-amplitude flux density variations in the radio band which are extreme not only for GRBs, but generally for any radio source. We interpret them as scintillation effects, though their extreme nature requires the scattering screen to be at a much smaller distance than usually assumed, multiple screens, or a combination of the two. Conclusions. The data are consistent with the simplest fireball scenario for a blast wave moving into a constant-density medium, and slow-cooling electrons. All fireball parameters are constrained at or better than a factor of 2, except for the density and the fraction of the energy in the magnetic field which has a factor of 10 uncertainty in both directions.

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More information

Published date: 1 June 2018
Additional Information: Funding Information: Acknowledgements. During the writing of this paper, the radio astronomy community lost a great scientist, and we lost a dear colleague and collaborator, Ger de Bruyn. His insights in radio scintillation were crucial in the work presented in this paper, and he will be missed by many. J. G. is particularly grateful to Phil Edwards for scheduling the many ATCA ToO observations. S. K., A. N. G., S. S., and D. A. K. acknowledge support by DFG grant Kl 766/16–1. D. A. K. acknowledges financial support from the Spanish research project AYA 2014-58381-P, and from Juan de la Cierva Incorporación fellowships IJCI-2015-26153 and IJCI-2014-21669. J. F. G., T. K., and P. W. acknowledge support through the Sofja Kovalevskaja award to P. Schady from the A. von Humboldt foundation of Germany. Part of the funding for GROND (both hardware and personnel) was generously granted from the Leibniz-Prize to Prof. G. Hasinger (DFG grant HA 1850/28-1). The Australia Telescope Compact Array is part of the Australia Telescope National Facility, which is funded by the Commonwealth of Australia for operation as a National Facility managed by CSIRO. ALMA is a partnership of ESO (representing its member states), NSF (USA), and NINS (Japan), together with NRC (Canada), NSC and ASIAA (Taiwan), and KASI (Republic of Korea), in cooperation with the Republic of Chile. The Joint ALMA Observatory is operated by ESO, AUI/NRAO, and NAOJ. This work made use of data supplied by the UK Swift Science Data Centre at the University of Leicester. Facilities: Max Planck:2.2 m (GROND), ATCA, ALMA, Swift Publisher Copyright: © ESO 2018.
Keywords: Gamma-ray burst: general, Gamma-ray burst: individual: GRB 151027B, Radiation mechanisms: non-thermal, Radio continuum: ISM, Techniques: photometric

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 483469
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/483469
ISSN: 0004-6361
PURE UUID: 43b76b01-56c1-4a02-a684-9c793c6f90f9
ORCID for P. Wiseman: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3073-1512

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Date deposited: 31 Oct 2023 17:51
Last modified: 12 Sep 2024 01:53

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Contributors

Author: J. Greiner
Author: J. Bolmer
Author: M. Wieringa
Author: A. J. Van Der Horst
Author: D. Petry
Author: S. Schulze
Author: F. Knust
Author: G. De Bruyn
Author: T. Krühler
Author: P. Wiseman ORCID iD
Author: S. Klose
Author: C. Delvaux
Author: J. F. Graham
Author: D. A. Kann
Author: A. Moin
Author: A. Nicuesa-Guelbenzu
Author: P. Schady
Author: S. Schmidl
Author: T. Schweyer
Author: M. Tanga
Author: S. Tingay
Author: H. Van Eerten
Author: K. Varela

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