A nearby long gamma-ray burst from a merger of compact objects

Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are flashes of high-energy radiation arising from energetic cosmic explosions. Bursts of long (>2 s) duration are produced by the core-collapse of massive stars, those of short (< 2 s) duration by the merger of two neutron stars (NSs). A third class of events with hybri...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2022-12
Hauptverfasser: Troja, E, Fryer, C L, O'Connor, B, Ryan, G, Dichiara, S, Kumar, A, Ito, N, Gupta, R, Wollaeger, R, Norris, J P, Kawai, N, Butler, N, Aryan, A, Misra, K, Hosokawa, R, Murata, K L, Niwano, M, Pandey, S B, Kutyrev, A, van Eerten, H J, Chase, E A, Y -D Hu, Caballero-Garcia, M D, Castro-Tirado, A J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are flashes of high-energy radiation arising from energetic cosmic explosions. Bursts of long (>2 s) duration are produced by the core-collapse of massive stars, those of short (< 2 s) duration by the merger of two neutron stars (NSs). A third class of events with hybrid high-energy properties was identified, but never conclusively linked to a stellar progenitor. The lack of bright supernovae rules out typical core-collapse explosions, but their distance scales prevent sensitive searches for direct signatures of a progenitor system. Only tentative evidence for a kilonova has been presented. Here we report observations of the exceptionally bright GRB211211A that classify it as a hybrid event and constrain its distance scale to only 346 Mpc. Our measurements indicate that its lower-energy (from ultraviolet to near-infrared) counterpart is powered by a luminous (~1E42 erg/s) kilonova possibly formed in the ejecta of a compact binary merger.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2209.03363