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The X-ray afterglow of the short gamma ray burst 050724

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posted on 2006-12-19, 16:02 authored by Sergio Campana, Gianpiero Tagliaferri, D. Lazzati, Guido Chincarini, S. Covino, Kim L. Page, Patrizia Romano, Alberto Moretti, Giancarlo Cusumano, V. Mangano, T. Mineo, V. La Parola, Paolo Giommi, M. Perri, M. Capalbi, B. Zhang, Scott D. Barthelmy, J.R. Cummings, Takanori Sakamoto, David N. Burrows, Jamie A. Kennea, John A. Nousek, Julian P. Osborne, Paul T. O'Brien, Olivier Godet, Neil Gehrels
Short duration (<~2 s) Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) have been a mystery since their discovery. Until May 2005 very little was known about short GRBs, but this situation has changed rapidly in the last few months since the Swift and HETE-2 satellites have made it possible to discover X-ray and optical counterparts to these sources. Positional associations indicate that short GRBs arise in close-by galaxies (z < 0.7). Here we report on a detailed study of the short GRB 050724 X-ray afterglow. This burst shows strong flaring variability in the X-ray band. It clearly confirms early suggestions of X-ray activity in the 50–100 s time interval following the GRB onset seen with BATSE. Late flare activity is also observed. These observations support the idea that flares are related to the inner engine for short GRBs, as well as long GRBs.

History

Citation

Astronomy and Astrophysics, 2006, 454, pp.113-117.

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Astronomy and Astrophysics

Publisher

EDP Sciences

issn

0004-6361

eissn

1432-0746

Copyright date

2006

Available date

2006-12-19

Publisher version

http://www.aanda.org/

Language

en

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