The afterglow of GRB 050709 and the nature of the short-hard γ-ray bursts

  • D. B. Fox
  • , D. A. Frail
  • , P. A. Price
  • , S. R. Kulkarni
  • , E. Berger
  • , T. Piran
  • , A. M. Soderberg
  • , S. B. Cenko
  • , P. B. Cameron
  • , A. Gal-Yam
  • , M. M. Kasliwal
  • , D. S. Moon
  • , F. A. Harrison
  • , E. Nakar
  • , B. P. Schmidt
  • , B. Penprase
  • , R. A. Chevalier
  • , P. Kumar
  • , K. Roth
  • , D. Watson
  • B. L. Lee, S. Shectman, M. M. Phillips, M. Roth, P. J. McCarthy, M. Rauch, L. Cowie, B. A. Peterson, J. Rich, N. Kawai, K. Aoki, G. Kosugi, T. Totani, H. S. Park, A. MacFadyen, K. C. Hurley

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

483 Scopus citations

Abstract

The final chapter in the long-standing mystery of the γ-ray bursts (GRBs) centres on the origin of the short-hard class of bursts, which are suspected on theoretical grounds to result from the coalescence of neutron-star or black-hole binary systems. Numerous searches for the afterglows of short-hard bursts have been made, galvanized by the revolution in our understanding of long-duration GRBs that followed the discovery in 1997 of their broadband (X-ray, optical and radio) afterglow emission. Here we present the discovery of the X-ray afterglow of a short-hard burst, GRB 050709, whose accurate position allows us to associate it unambiguously with a star-forming galaxy at redshift z = 0.160, and whose optical lightcurve definitively excludes a supernova association. Together with results from three other recent short-hard bursts, this suggests that short-hard bursts release much less energy than the long-duration GRBs. Models requiring young stellar populations, such as magnetars and collapsars, are ruled out, while coalescing degenerate binaries remain the most promising progenitor candidates.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)845-850
Number of pages6
JournalNature
Volume437
Issue number7060
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 6 2005

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • General

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