We present detailed observations of the bright short-hard gamma-ray burst GRB 090510 made with the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) and Large Area Telescope (LAT) on board the Fermi observatory. GRB 090510 is the first burst detected by the LAT that shows strong evidence for a deviation from a Band spectral fitting function during the prompt emission phase. The time-integrated spectrum is fit by the sum of a Band function with E peak = 3.9 ± 0.3 MeV, which is the highest yet measured, and a hard power-law component with photon index –1.62 ± 0.03 that dominates the emission below ≈20 keV and above ≈100 MeV. The onset of the high-energy spectral component appears to be delayed by ~0.1 s with respect to the onset of a component well fit with a single Band function. A faint GBM pulse and a LAT photon are detected 0.5 s before the main pulse. During the prompt phase, the LAT detected a photon with energy 30.5+5.8 –2.6 GeV, the highest ever measured from a short GRB. Observation of this photon sets a minimum bulk outflow Lorentz factor, Γgsim 1200, using simple γγ opacity arguments for this GRB at redshift z = 0.903 and a variability timescale on the order of tens of ms for the ≈100 keV-few MeV flux. Stricter high confidence estimates imply Γ gsim 1000 and still require that the outflows powering short GRBs are at least as highly relativistic as those of long-duration GRBs. Implications of the temporal behavior and power-law shape of the additional component on synchrotron/synchrotron self-Compton, external-shock synchrotron, and hadronic models are considered.

FERMI OBSERVATIONS OF GRB 090510: A SHORT-HARD GAMMA-RAY BURST WITH AN ADDITIONAL, HARD POWER-LAW COMPONENT FROM 10 keV TO GeV ENERGIES

BALDINI, LUCA;RAZZANO, MASSIMILIANO;
2010-01-01

Abstract

We present detailed observations of the bright short-hard gamma-ray burst GRB 090510 made with the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) and Large Area Telescope (LAT) on board the Fermi observatory. GRB 090510 is the first burst detected by the LAT that shows strong evidence for a deviation from a Band spectral fitting function during the prompt emission phase. The time-integrated spectrum is fit by the sum of a Band function with E peak = 3.9 ± 0.3 MeV, which is the highest yet measured, and a hard power-law component with photon index –1.62 ± 0.03 that dominates the emission below ≈20 keV and above ≈100 MeV. The onset of the high-energy spectral component appears to be delayed by ~0.1 s with respect to the onset of a component well fit with a single Band function. A faint GBM pulse and a LAT photon are detected 0.5 s before the main pulse. During the prompt phase, the LAT detected a photon with energy 30.5+5.8 –2.6 GeV, the highest ever measured from a short GRB. Observation of this photon sets a minimum bulk outflow Lorentz factor, Γgsim 1200, using simple γγ opacity arguments for this GRB at redshift z = 0.903 and a variability timescale on the order of tens of ms for the ≈100 keV-few MeV flux. Stricter high confidence estimates imply Γ gsim 1000 and still require that the outflows powering short GRBs are at least as highly relativistic as those of long-duration GRBs. Implications of the temporal behavior and power-law shape of the additional component on synchrotron/synchrotron self-Compton, external-shock synchrotron, and hadronic models are considered.
2010
Ackermann, M; Asano, K; Atwood, Wb; Axelsson, M; Baldini, Luca; Ballet, J; Barbiellini, G; Baring, Mg; Bastieri, D; Bechtol, K; Bellazzini, R; Berenji, B; Bhat, Pn; Bissaldi, E; Blandford, Rd; Bloom, Ed; Bonamente, E; Borgland, Aw; Bouvier, A; Bregeon, J; Brez, A; Briggs, Ms; Brigida, M; Bruel, P; Buson, S; Caliandro, Ga; Cameron, Ra; Caraveo, Pa; Carrigan, S; Casandjian, Jm; Cecchi, C; Celik, O; Charles, E; Chiang, J; Ciprini, S; Claus, R; Cohen Tanugi, J; Connaughton, V; Conrad, J; Dermer, Cd; de Palma, F; Dingus, Bl; Silva, Ede; Drell, Ps; Dubois, R; Dumora, D; Farnier, C; Favuzzi, C; Fegan, Sj; Finke, J; Focke, Wb; Frailis, M; Fukazawa, Y; Fusco, P; Gargano, F; Gasparrini, D; Gehrels, N; Germani, S; Giglietto, N; Giordano, F; Glanzman, T; Godfrey, G; Granot, J; Grenier, Ia; Grondin, Mh; Grove, Je; Guiriec, S; Hadasch, D; Harding, Ak; Hays, E; Horan, D; Hughes, Re; Johannesson, G; Johnson, Wn; Kamae, T; Katagiri, H; Kataoka, J; Kawai, N; Kippen, Rm; Knodlseder, J; Kocevski, D; Kouveliotou, C; Kuss, M; Lande, J; Latronico, L; Lemoine Goumard, M; Garde, Ml; Longo, F; Loparco, F; Lott, B; Lovellette, Mn; Lubrano, P; Makeev, A; Mazziotta, Mn; Mcenery, Je; Mcglynn, S; Meegan, C; Meszaros, P; Michelson, Pf; Mitthumsiri, W; Mizuno, T; Moiseev, Aa; Monte, C; Monzani, Me; Moretti, E; Morselli, A; Moskalenko, Iv; Murgia, S; Nakajima, H; Nakamori, T; Nolan, Pl; Norris, Jp; Nuss, E; Ohno, M; Ohsugi, T; Omodei, N; Orlando, E; Ormes, Jf; Ozaki, M; Paciesas, Ws; Paneque, D; Panetta, Jh; Parent, D; Pelassa, V; Pepe, M; Pesce Rollins, M; Piron, F; Preece, R; Raino, S; Rando, R; Razzano, Massimiliano; Razzaque, S; Reimer, A; Ritz, S; Rodriguez, Ay; Roth, M; Ryde, F; Sadrozinski, Hfw; Sander, A; Scargle, Jd; Schalk, Tl; Sgro, C; Siskind, Ej; Smith, Pd; Spandre, G; Spinelli, P; Stamatikos, M; Stecker, Fw; Strickman, Ms; Suson, Dj; Tajima, H; Takahashi, H; Takahashi, T; Tanaka, T; Thayer, Jb; Thayer, Jg; Thompson, Dj; Tibaldo, L; Toma, K; Torres, Df; Tosti, G; Tramacere, A; Uchiyama, Y; Uehara, T; Usher, Tl; van der Horst, Aj; Vasileiou, V; Vilchez, N; Vitale, V; von Kienlin, A; Waite, Ap; Wang, P; Wilson Hodge, C; Winer, Bl; Wu, Xf; Yamazaki, R; Yang, Z; Ylinen, T; Ziegler, M.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11568/195200
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