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Faint
gamma-ray bursts do actually exist
Monday, October 13, 2008
Distribution
of faint gamma-ray bursts as observed by Integral
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Credit:
S. Foley/UCD
Gamma-ray bursts, powerful
glares of high-energy that wash through the Universe once every
day or so are, for a brief time, the brightest objects in the
gamma-ray sky. ESA’s Integral gamma-ray observatory has
observed several low-luminosity gamma-ray bursts, confirming the
existence of an entire population of weaker bursts hardly noticed
so far.
When it comes to detecting gamma-ray bursts (or
GRBs), Integral is equipped with the most sensitive detector ever
launched into space – the IBIS imager. Its field of view is
very well shielded from any background radiation, making the
detection of faint gamma-ray signals possible.
Astronomers estimate that about
1400 GRBs per year occur but, because no one knows when and where
they are going to appear, only a part of them happen to be
detected. Integral detects an average of 10 GRBs per year, and
has collected data about 47 of them during four and a half years
of operations.
When studying IBIS gamma-ray
burst data, Prof. Lorraine Hanlon from the School of Physics,
University College Dublin, Ireland, and her colleagues, realized
that some of the faintest bursts have distinctive gamma-ray
emission, and also present faint afterglows in the lower-energy
X-ray and visible wavelengths.
Since, in general, GRBs are
colossal explosions of energy triggered by the collision of very
massive and compact objects such as neutron stars or black holes,
or by the explosion of incredibly powerful supernovae, or
hypernovae, one may think that these bursts are perceived as
faint just because they take place very far away from us, in the
remote corners of the Universe.
However, Prof. Hanlon and
colleagues noticed that these faint bursts, just at the
sensitivity threshold of IBIS, seem to originate in our cosmic
neighborhood, within the nearby clusters of galaxies.
“If
the bursts we have studied are so ‘close’ in
cosmological terms, it means that they are faint from the
beginning,” says Hanlon. “From this we can deduce
that the processes triggering them could be less energetic than
those generating the more powerful bursts we are more used to
observing.”
The study team suggests that the faint
bursts may be generated by the collapse of a massive star that
does not present the characteristics of a supernova, or by the
merger of two white dwarfs (small and dense stars about the size
of Earth), or by the merger of a white dwarf with a neutron star
or a black hole.
“Past observations had
already hinted the existence of faint GRBs, and thanks to
Integral’s sensitivity we can now say that an entire
population of them exist,” added Hanlon. “Actually,
their rate may even be higher than that of the most luminous GRBs
but, just because they are weaker, we may be only able to see
those which are relatively close by.”
“More Integral
observations in the coming years will definitively help us
understand the phenomenon of faint GRBs, and to explore the
nature of this newly observed population,” she concluded.
Source:
ESA

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