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Gamma Ray Bursts - Cosmological Perspective

Rick Egeland. Gamma Ray Bursts - Cosmological Perspective. Paczynski. Supports the cosmological origin of GRBs Stresses the importance of the isotropic distribution Pleads that we don't use theoretical models to determine distance scale to GRBs. Number Density. If isotropic, N(>F) ~ F -3/2

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Gamma Ray Bursts - Cosmological Perspective

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  1. Rick Egeland Gamma Ray Bursts - Cosmological Perspective

  2. Paczynski • Supports the cosmological origin of GRBs • Stresses the importance of the isotropic distribution • Pleads that we don't use theoretical models to determine distance scale to GRBs

  3. Number Density • If isotropic, N(>F) ~ F-3/2 • PVO detects ~200 "strong" bursts • N~F-1.4 • BATSE, 30 x more sensitive • N~F-0.8 • Explaination: • Burst distribution is bounded • Space is non-euclidean at large distances

  4. Distance Determination • Trigonemetric parallax, ~100 pc • Dynamic parallax • Proper motions • Gravitational Lensing • Standard candles • Ly-Alpha Redshift • Distribution alone • Comparable object (Lamb)

  5. Known Distributions • Billions of stars, hundreds of known types of objects, but only a few known distributions of objects • There has been no new distribution of objects for decades

  6. Solar distributions • Objects of the inner solar system distributed about the ecliptic plane • Outer solar system objects, comets, Oort cloud, approximately spherically distributed about the Sun

  7. Stars

  8. Globular Clusters

  9. Galaxies • Local group galaxies highly clustered • Faraway galaxies approximately isotropic

  10. XRBs and SGRs

  11. GRB DistributionBATSE 2nd Catalog

  12. Distribution Conclusion • The observed isotropic distribution is automatically satisfied if we assume cosmilogical distances • Only other valid distribution is that of local stars, but why would we be so special? • Or some new distribution, a uniformly spherical and isotropic galactic distribution

  13. Other Bursts • X-ray Bursts of Type I: Thermonuclear explosions on neutron stars due to acreted gasses from close binary companion star • XRBs of Type II: Unstable acreation flow onto a neutron star • Peak Luminosity: ~1038 ergs/s • Blackbody spectrum ~ 2 keV peak • Old; ~108 years • Not like GRBs

  14. Other Bursts • Soft Gamma Repeaters (SGRs) • 3 known (in 1995) • Super nova remnants, neutron stars with ultra strong (1015 gauss) magnetic field • Peak luminosity 1042 erg/s • Thermal spectrum, peak at 30 keV • Young: ~ 10,000 years old • Not like GRBs

  15. Other Bursts • March 5 1979 Event • SGR 0526-66: in the Large Magellanic Cloud • Peak Luminocity of 1045 erg/s • Hard spectrum (200 keV) in its ~0.2 s duration • Most similar to GRBs

  16. Problems With Galactic GRBs • The observed distribution cannot be reconciled with neutron star ages of ~104 • Ad hoc assumptions • Bursting stops ~104 years, resumes at 108 • There is a broad distribution of turn on ages to hide any clustering at galactic center

  17. Problems with Galactic GRBs • Mar 5 event was intense enough to be seen out to Andromeda • Must require that GRBs are on average a few orders of magnitude less intense than the Mar 5 event • GRBs must stop bursting at 3 x 108 years, otherwise those born in M31 reach us and we see a dipole in that direction

  18. Problems with Galactic GRBs • Simple energy calculations using energy recieved at BATSE for SGRs requires all neutron stars to burst 3 x 106 times, at 1042 ergs/burst • This is a bit much, so another assumption is made that radio pulsars also GRB • But since low v pulsars are not found to be different than slow pulsars, we must assume that only high v pulsars, after ageing of 108 years can burst

  19. Too Many Ad Hoc Assumptions! • Paczynski concludes that the coronal distribution is not a viable scientific proposition

  20. Theoretical Models • In 1995, there were over 100 papers on the mechanism of GRBs • If there are 100 different theories, and only 1 can be correct, than it is probable that none of them are correct! • Success of XRB models (surface of NS) may have been the reason for so many NS models of GRBs

  21. GRBs Nonthermal Broad spectrum from 1 keV - 107 keV Isotropic Do not repeat, or repeat on long time scales XRBs vs. GRBs • XRBs • Thermal • Peak at 5 keV • Galactic plane -> 8 Mpc • Repeat

  22. Paczynski's Conclusion • Success of XRB model was due to knowing the distance scale • Should not use a theoretical model to determine the distance for us!

  23. Hope For the Future • Notes that over the past 4 years the galactic models have moved the source halo from 100 pc to 100 kpc • Soon they may be at 1 Gpc scales and still be of galactic origin!

  24. Paczynski's Suggestions • Need more sensitive detectors than BATSE to not see the proposed galactic GRBs from M31 which must exist • If GRBs are proved to be at cosmological distances they could be useful tools for cosmology • Need experiment with ~1 arcsec positions for counterparts

  25. What do you think?

  26. After the Debate • Transient objects observed in X-ray and optical using BeppoSAX setellite and a notification network (GRB970228)

  27. Hubble Optical Transient GRB970228 Z ~ 0.7 +/- 0.1 (Lipunov et. al.)

  28. Fading Away

  29. May 8 1997 GRB Keck Observation -> z > 0.8

  30. How Bright?

  31. More Recently... • Week of Mar 23, HETE discovered four GRBs with optical transients and redshifts • A GRB was detected from the site of a supernova, supporting the supra-nova, black hole model • Some precise X-ray absorption of Si an S detected

  32. The Future of GRBs • SWIFT goes up Dec 2003 • Detects GR, X-ray, UV, and Optical • GR - 5 arcmin • XR - 5 arcsec • UVO - 0.3 arcsec

  33. And In Theory... • Two leading models today • Hypernova Star Death • Colliding Neutron Stars • "Chinese Lanterns"

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