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Circular polarization in the optical afterglow of GRB 121024A.

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posted on 2015-05-07, 13:47 authored by K. Wiersema, S. Covino, K. Toma, A. J. van der Horst, K. Varela, M. Min, J. Greiner, R. L. C. Starling, N. R. Tanvir, R. A. Wijers, S. Campana, P. A. Curran, Y. Fan, J. P. Fynbo, J. Gorosabel, A. Gomboc, D. Götz, J. Hjorth, Z. P. Jin, S. Kobayashi, C. Kouveliotou, C. Mundell, P. T. O'Brien, E. Pian, A. Rowlinson, D. M. Russell, R. Salvaterra, S. di Serego Alighieri, G. Tagliaferri, S. D. Vergani, J. Elliott, C. G. Fariña, O. E. Hartoog, R. Karjalainen, S. Klose, F. Knust, A. J. Levan, P. Schady, V. Sudilovsky, R. Willingale
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are most probably powered by collimated relativistic outflows (jets) from accreting black holes at cosmological distances. Bright afterglows are produced when the outflow collides with the ambient medium. Afterglow polarization directly probes the magnetic properties of the jet when measured minutes after the burst, and it probes the geometric properties of the jet and the ambient medium when measured hours to days after the burst. High values of optical polarization detected minutes after the burst of GRB 120308A indicate the presence of large-scale ordered magnetic fields originating from the central engine (the power source of the GRB). Theoretical models predict low degrees of linear polarization and no circular polarization at late times, when the energy in the original ejecta is quickly transferred to the ambient medium and propagates farther into the medium as a blast wave. Here we report the detection of circularly polarized light in the afterglow of GRB 121024A, measured 0.15 days after the burst. We show that the circular polarization is intrinsic to the afterglow and unlikely to be produced by dust scattering or plasma propagation effects. A possible explanation is to invoke anisotropic (rather than the commonly assumed isotropic) electron pitch-angle distributions, and we suggest that new models are required to produce the complex microphysics of realistic shocks in relativistic jets.

Funding

This work is based on observations made with ESO telescopes at the Paranal Observatory under programme 090.D-0789. K.W. was supported by STFC. K.T. was supported by a JSPS Research Fellowship for Young Scientists no. 231446. A.J.v.d.H., R.A.M.J.W. and A.R. were supported by the European Research Council via Advanced Investigator grant no. 247295. R.L.C.S. was supported by a Royal Society Fellowship. Y.F. was supported by the 973 Programme of China, under grant 2013CB837000. D.M.R. was supported by a Marie Curie Intra European Fellowship within the 7th European Community Framework Programme under contract no. IEF 274805. This work was supported by the Australian Research Council (grant DP120102393).

History

Citation

Nature, 2014, 509 (7499), pp. 201-204

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Nature

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

issn

0028-0836

eissn

1476-4687

Available date

2015-05-07

Publisher version

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v509/n7499/full/nature13237.html

Language

en

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