SIMBAD references

2005A&A...438..829C - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 438, 829-840 (2005/8-2)

The puzzling case of GRB 990123: prompt emission and broad-band afterglow modeling.

CORSI A., PIRO L., KUULKERS E., AMATI L., ANTONELLI L.A., COSTA E., FEROCI M., FRONTERA F., GUIDORZI C., HEISE J., IN'T ZAND J., MAIORANO E., MONTANARI E., NICASTRO L., PIAN E. and SOFFITTA P.

Abstract (from CDS):

We report on BeppoSAX simultaneous X- and γ-ray observations of the bright γ-ray burst (GRB) 990123. We present the broad-band spectrum of the prompt emission, including optical, X- and γ-rays, confirming the suggestion that the emission mechanisms at low and high frequencies must have different physical origins. In the framework of the standard fireball model, we discuss the X-ray afterglow observed by the Narrow Field Instruments (NFIs) on board BeppoSAX and its hard X-ray emission up to 60keV several hours after the burst, detected for about 20ks by the Phoswich Detection System (PDS). Considering the 2-10keV and optical light curves, the 0.1-60keV spectrum during the 20ks in which the PDS signal was present and the 8.46GHz upper limits, we find that the multi-wavelength observations cannot be readily accommodated by basic afterglow models. While the temporal and spectral behavior of the optical afterglow is possibly explained by a synchrotron cooling frequency between the optical and the X-ray energy band during the NFIs observations, in X-rays this assumption only accounts for the slope of the 2-10keV light curve, but not for the flatness of the 0.1-60keV spectrum. Including the contribution of Inverse Compton (IC) scattering, we solve the problem of the flat X-ray spectrum and justify the hard X-ray emission; we also suggest that the lack of a significant detection of 15-60keV emission in the following 75ks and last 70ks spectra, should be related to poorer statistics rather than to an important suppression of IC contribution. However, considering also the radio band data, we find the 8.46GHz upper limits violated. On the other hand, leaving unchanged the emission mechanism requires modifying the hydrodynamics by invoking an ambient medium whose density rises rapidly with radius and by having the shock losing energy. Thus we are left with an open puzzle which requires further inspection.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): gamma rays: bursts - X-rays: bursts - radiation mechanisms: non-thermal - cosmology: observations

Simbad objects: 9

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