Five Years of Multi-frequency Monitoring of GRB030329 Afterglow Using the GMRT and WSRT

Authors
Publication date 2009
Host editors
  • C. Meegan
  • N. Gehrels
  • C. Kouveliotou
Book title Gamma-Ray Bursts
Book subtitle 6th Huntsville symposium : Huntsville, Alabama, 20-23 October 2008
ISBN
  • 9780735406704
Series AIP Conference Proceedings
Event 6th Huntsville Symposium on Gamma-Ray Bursts, Huntsville, AL, USA
Pages (from-to) 169-174
Publisher Melville, NY: American Institute of Physics
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
GRB 030329 displayed one of the brightest optical afterglows ever. We have followed the radio afterglow of GRB 030329 for over 5 years using the GMRT and WSRT at low radio frequencies. This is the longest as well as the lowest frequency follow up of any GRB afterglow ever.Radio observations of a GRB afterglow provide a unique probe of the physics of the blast wave at late times, when the expansion of the fireball slows down to non‐relativistic speeds. Our GMRT‐WSRT observations suggest that the afterglow of GRB030329 entered the non‐relativistic phase around 60 days after the burst. The estimate of the fireball energy content, ∼1051 erg, in this near‐isotropic phase is much less susceptible to the collimation‐related uncertainties arising in the relativistic phase. We have also been closely monitoring the evolution of the afterglow to look for possible signatures of emission from a counter jet, but no conclusive evidence has so far been found.
Document type Conference contribution
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3155871
Permalink to this page
Back