Cargando…
The Cannonball Model of Gamma Ray Bursts: Lines in the X-Ray Afterglow
Recent observations suggest that gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) and their afterglows are produced by jets of highly relativistic cannonballs (CBs), emitted in supernova explosions. The fully ionized CBs cool to a temperature below 4500 K within a day or two, at which point electron-proton recombination pro...
Autores principales: | , |
---|---|
Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2001
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | http://cds.cern.ch/record/486481 |
_version_ | 1780896952188141568 |
---|---|
author | Dar, Arnon De Rujula, A. |
author_facet | Dar, Arnon De Rujula, A. |
author_sort | Dar, Arnon |
collection | CERN |
description | Recent observations suggest that gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) and their afterglows are produced by jets of highly relativistic cannonballs (CBs), emitted in supernova explosions. The fully ionized CBs cool to a temperature below 4500 K within a day or two, at which point electron-proton recombination produces an intense Lyman-$\alpha$ emission. The line energy is Doppler-shifted by the CBs' motion to X-ray energies in the observer's frame. The measured line energies, corrected for their cosmological redshift, imply Doppler factors in the range 600 to 1000, consistent with those estimated -in the CB model- from the characteristics of the $\gamma$-ray bursts. All other observed properties of the lines are also well described by the CB model. Scattering and self-absorption of the recombination lines within the CB also produce a wide-band flare-up in the GRB afterglow, as the observations indicate. A very specific prediction of the CB model is that the X-ray lines ought to be narrow and move towards lower line energies as they are observed: their current apparently large widths would be the effect of time integration, and/or of the blending of lines from CBs with different Doppler factors. |
id | cern-486481 |
institution | Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear |
language | eng |
publishDate | 2001 |
record_format | invenio |
spelling | cern-4864812023-03-14T17:02:31Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/486481engDar, ArnonDe Rujula, A.The Cannonball Model of Gamma Ray Bursts: Lines in the X-Ray AfterglowAstrophysics and AstronomyRecent observations suggest that gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) and their afterglows are produced by jets of highly relativistic cannonballs (CBs), emitted in supernova explosions. The fully ionized CBs cool to a temperature below 4500 K within a day or two, at which point electron-proton recombination produces an intense Lyman-$\alpha$ emission. The line energy is Doppler-shifted by the CBs' motion to X-ray energies in the observer's frame. The measured line energies, corrected for their cosmological redshift, imply Doppler factors in the range 600 to 1000, consistent with those estimated -in the CB model- from the characteristics of the $\gamma$-ray bursts. All other observed properties of the lines are also well described by the CB model. Scattering and self-absorption of the recombination lines within the CB also produce a wide-band flare-up in the GRB afterglow, as the observations indicate. A very specific prediction of the CB model is that the X-ray lines ought to be narrow and move towards lower line energies as they are observed: their current apparently large widths would be the effect of time integration, and/or of the blending of lines from CBs with different Doppler factors.Recent observations suggest that gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) and their afterglows are produced by jets of highly relativistic cannonballs (CBs), emitted in supernova explosions. The fully ionized CBs cool to a temperature below 4500 K within a day or two, at which point electron-proton recombination produces an intense Lyman-$\alpha$ emission. The line energy is Doppler-shifted by the CBs' motion to X-ray energies in the observer's frame. The measured line energies, corrected for their cosmological redshift, imply Doppler factors in the range 600 to 1000, consistent with those estimated -in the CB model- from the characteristics of the $\gamma$-ray bursts. All other observed properties of the lines are also well described by the CB model. Scattering and self-absorption of the recombination lines within the CB also produce a wide-band flare-up in the GRB afterglow, as the observations indicate. A very specific prediction of the CB model is that the X-ray lines ought to be narrow and move towards lower line energies as they are observed: their current apparently large widths would be the effect of time integration, and/or of the blending of lines from CBs with different Doppler factors.astro-ph/0102115CERN-TH-2001-033CERN-TH-2001-033oai:cds.cern.ch:4864812001-02-07 |
spellingShingle | Astrophysics and Astronomy Dar, Arnon De Rujula, A. The Cannonball Model of Gamma Ray Bursts: Lines in the X-Ray Afterglow |
title | The Cannonball Model of Gamma Ray Bursts: Lines in the X-Ray Afterglow |
title_full | The Cannonball Model of Gamma Ray Bursts: Lines in the X-Ray Afterglow |
title_fullStr | The Cannonball Model of Gamma Ray Bursts: Lines in the X-Ray Afterglow |
title_full_unstemmed | The Cannonball Model of Gamma Ray Bursts: Lines in the X-Ray Afterglow |
title_short | The Cannonball Model of Gamma Ray Bursts: Lines in the X-Ray Afterglow |
title_sort | cannonball model of gamma ray bursts: lines in the x-ray afterglow |
topic | Astrophysics and Astronomy |
url | http://cds.cern.ch/record/486481 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT dararnon thecannonballmodelofgammarayburstslinesinthexrayafterglow AT derujulaa thecannonballmodelofgammarayburstslinesinthexrayafterglow AT dararnon cannonballmodelofgammarayburstslinesinthexrayafterglow AT derujulaa cannonballmodelofgammarayburstslinesinthexrayafterglow |