The Properties of GRB 120923A at a Spectroscopic Redshift of z ≈ 7.8

Authors
  • N.R. Tanvir
  • T. Laskar
  • A.J. Levan
  • D.A. Perley
  • J. Zabl
  • J.P.U. Fynbo
  • J. Rhoads
  • S.B. Cenko
  • J. Greiner
  • K. Wiersema
  • J. Hjorth
  • A. Cucchiara
  • E. Berger
  • M.N. Bremer
  • Z. Cano
  • B.E. Cobb
  • S. Covino
  • V. D’Elia
  • W. Fong
  • A.S. Fruchter
  • P. Goldoni
  • F. Hammer
  • K.E. Heintz
  • P. Jakobsson
  • D.A. Kann
  • L. Kaper
  • S. Klose
  • F. Knust
  • T. Krühler
  • D. Malesani
  • K. Misra
  • A. Nicuesa Guelbenzu
  • G. Pugliese
  • R. Sánchez-Ramírez
  • S. Schulze
  • E.R. Stanway
  • A. de Ugarte Postigo
  • D. Watson
  • R.A.M.J. Wijers
  • D. Xu
Publication date 27-09-2018
Journal Astrophysical Journal
Article number 107
Volume | Issue number 865 | 2
Number of pages 16
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are powerful probes of early stars and galaxies, during and potentially even before the era of reionization. Although the number of GRBs identified at z gsim 6 remains small, they provide a unique window on typical star-forming galaxies at that time, and thus are complementary to deep field observations. We report the identification of the optical drop-out afterglow of Swift GRB 120923A in near-infrared Gemini-North imaging, and derive a redshift of $z={7.84}_{-0.12}^{+0.06}$ from Very Large Telescope/X-shooter spectroscopy. At this redshift the peak 15–150 keV luminosity of the burst was 3.2 × 1052 erg s−1, and in this sense it was a rather typical long-duration GRB in terms of rest frame luminosity. This burst was close to the Swift/Burst Alert Telescope detection threshold, and the X-ray and near-infrared afterglow were also faint. We present ground- and space-based follow-up observations spanning from X-ray to radio, and find that a standard external shock model with a constant-density circumburst environment of density n ≈ 4 × 10−2 cm−3 gives a good fit to the data. The near-infrared light curve exhibits a sharp break at t ≈ 3.4 days in the observer frame which, if interpreted as being due to a jet, corresponds to an opening angle of ${\theta }_{\mathrm{jet}}\approx 5^\circ $. The beaming-corrected γ-ray energy is then ${E}_{\gamma }\approx 2\times {10}^{50}$ erg, while the beaming-corrected kinetic energy is lower, ${E}_{{\rm{K}}}\approx {10}^{49}$ erg, suggesting that GRB 120923A was a comparatively low kinetic energy event. We discuss the implications of this event for our understanding of the high-redshift population of GRBs and their identification.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aadba9
Other links http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2018ApJ...865..107T
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