A Gamma-Ray Burst with a 220 Microsecond Rise Time and a Sharp Spectral Cutoff
Open Access
- 1 February 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Astronomical Society in The Astrophysical Journal
- Vol. 511 (2) , L89-L92
- https://doi.org/10.1086/311850
Abstract
The gamma-ray burst GRB 920229 has four extreme and unprecedented properties: a spike near the end of the burst has a rise in brightness with an e-folding timescale of 220±30 μs, a fall in brightness with an e-folding timescale of 400±100 μs, and a large change in spectral shape over a time of 768 μs, while the spectrum of the entire burst has a sharp spectral cutoff to high energies with ΔE/E=18%. The rapid changes occur during a spike in the light curve that was seen 0.164 s after the start of the burst. The spectrum has a peak νFν at 200 keV with no significant flux above 239 keV, although the cutoff energy shifts to less than 100 keV during the decay of the spike. These numbers can be used to place severe limits on fireball models of bursts. The thickness of the energy production region must be smaller than ~66 km, ejected shells must have a dispersion of the Lorentz factor of less than roughly 1% along a particular radius, and the angular size of the radiation emission region is on the order of 1' as viewed from the burst center. The physical mechanism that caused the sharp spectral cutoff has not been determined.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Search for Millisecond Periodic Pulsations in BATSE Gamma‐Ray BurstsThe Astrophysical Journal, 1997
- The radio afterglow from the γ-ray burst of 8 May 1997Nature, 1997
- Discovery of an X-ray afterglow associated with the γ-ray burst of 28 February 1997Nature, 1997
- Optical and Long‐Wavelength Afterglow from Gamma‐Ray BurstsThe Astrophysical Journal, 1997
- An Efficient Algorithm for the Detection of Infrequent Rapid Bursts in Time Series DataThe Astrophysical Journal, 1997
- Expanding Relativistic Shells and Gamma‐Ray Burst Temporal StructureThe Astrophysical Journal, 1996
- The first BATSE gamma-ray burst catalogThe Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series, 1994
- Escape of high-energy photons from relativistically expanding gamma-ray burst sourcesAIP Conference Proceedings, 1994
- BATSE observations of gamma-ray burst spectra. I - Spectral diversityThe Astrophysical Journal, 1993
- Evidence for sub-millisecond structure in a γ-ray burstNature, 1992