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The first swift X-ray flash: The faint afterglow of XRF 050215B

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posted on 2012-10-24, 09:07 authored by A. J. Levan, J. P. Osborne, N. R. Tanvir, K. L. Page, E. Rol, B. Zhang, M. R. Goad, P. T. O'Brien, R. S. Priddey, D. N. Burrows, R. Chapman, A. S. Fruchter, P. Giommi, N. Gehrels, M. A. Hughes, S. Pak, C. Simpson, G. Tagliaferri, E. Vardoulaki
We present the discovery of XRF 050215B and its afterglow. The burst was detected by the Swift BAT during the check-out phase, and observations with the X-Ray Telescope began approximately 30 minutes after the burst. These observations found a faint, slowly fading X-ray afterglow near the center of the error box as reported by the BAT. Infrared data obtained at UKIRT after 10 hr also revealed a very faint K-band afterglow. The afterglow appears unusual since it is very faint, especially in the infrared, with K > 20 only 9 hr postburst. The X-ray and infrared light curves exhibit a slow, monotonic decay with α ~ 0.8 and no evidence for a steepening associated with the jet break to 10 days postburst. We discuss possible explanations for the faintness and slow decay in the context of present models for the production of X-ray flashes.

History

Citation

The Astrophysical Journal, 648:1132-1138, 2006 September 10

Published in

The Astrophysical Journal

Publisher

American Astronomical Society, IOP Publishing

issn

2041-8205

eissn

2041-8213

Available date

2012-10-24

Publisher version

http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1086/506018/meta

Language

en

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