SIMBAD references

2001MNRAS.325.1477V - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 325, 1477-1486 (2001/August-3)

The visibility of gamma-ray burst afterglows in dusty star-forming regions.

VENEMANS B.P. and BLAIN A.W.

Abstract (from CDS):

Recent observations of the environments of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) favour massive stars as their progenitors, which are likely to be surrounded by gas and dust. The visibility of the optical and UV emission of a GRB is expected to depend on the characteristics of both the dust and the GRB emission itself. A reasonable distribution of surrounding dust is capable of absorbing all the optical and UV emission of the optical flash and afterglow of a GRB, unless the optical flash has a peak isotropic luminosity Lpeak≳1049erg.s–1. This means that dark bursts should exist and these bursts will have to be studied at infrared rather than optical wavelengths. In this paper details will be given about the infrared GRB dust emission. The reprocessed dust emission peaks at a rest-frame wavelength of about 8µm. Forthcoming space telescopes, in particular the IRAC camera on board the Space Infrared Telescope Facility, could detect this emission out to a redshift of about two. However, an accurate position of the GRB afterglow must be provided for this emission to be identified, because the light curve of the reprocessed dust emission does not vary on time-scales less than several years.

Abstract Copyright: The Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): radiative transfer - methods: observational - ISM: clouds - dust, extinction - gamma-rays: burst - infrared: galaxies

Simbad objects: 5

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