Detection of GRB 060927 at z = 5.47: Implications for the Use of Gamma-Ray Bursts as Probes of the End of the Dark Ages

Authors
  • A.E. Ruiz-Velasco
  • H. Swan
  • E. Troja
  • D. Malesani
  • J.P.U. Fynbo
  • R.L.C. Starling
  • D. Xu
  • F. Aharonian
  • C. Akerlof
  • M.I. Andersen
  • M.C.B. Ashley
  • S.D. Barthelmy
  • D.F. Bersier
  • J.M. Cerón
  • A.J. Castro-Tirado
  • N. Gehrels
  • E. Göğüş
  • J. Gorosabel
  • C. Guidorzi
  • T. Güver
  • J. Hjorth
  • D. Horns
  • K.Y. Huang
  • P. Jakobsson
  • B.L. Jensen
  • Ü. Kiziloglu
  • C. Kouveliotou
  • H.A. Krimm
  • C. Ledoux
  • A.J. Levan
  • T. Marsh
  • T. McKay
  • A. Melandri
  • B. Milvang-Jensen
  • C.G. Mundell
  • P.T. O'Brien
  • M. Özel
  • A. Phillips
  • R. Quimby
  • G. Rowell
  • W. Rujopakarn
  • E.S. Rykoff
  • B.E. Schaefer
  • J. Sollerman
  • N.R. Tanvir
  • C.C. Thöne
  • Y. Urata
  • W.T. Vestrand
  • P.M. Vreeswijk
  • D. Watson
  • J.C. Wheeler
  • R.A.M.J. Wijers
  • J. Wren
  • S.A. Yost
  • F. Yuan
  • M. Zhai
  • W.K. Zheng
Publication date 2007
Journal Astrophysical Journal
Volume | Issue number 669 | 1
Pages (from-to) 1-9
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
We report on follow-up observations of the gamma-ray burst GRB 060927 using the robotic ROTSE-IIIa telescope and a suite of larger aperture ground-based telescopes. An optical afterglow was detected 20 s after the burst, the earliest rest-frame detection of optical emission from any GRB. Spectroscopy performed with the VLT about 13 hr after the trigger shows a continuum break at lambda~8070 Å, produced by neutral hydrogen absorption at z~5.6. We also detect an absorption line at 8158 Å, which we interpret as Si II lambda1260 at z=5.467. Hence, GRB 060927 is the second most distant GRB with a spectroscopically measured redshift. The shape of the red wing of the spectral break can be fitted by a damped Lyalpha profile with a column density with log(NH/cm-2)=22.50+/-0.15. We discuss the implications of this work for the use of GRBs as probes of the end of the dark ages and draw three main conclusions: (1) GRB afterglows originating from z>~6 should be relatively easy to detect from the ground, but rapid near-infrared monitoring is necessary to ensure that they are found; (2) the presence of large H I column densities in some GRB host galaxies at z>5 makes the use of GRBs to probe the reionization epoch via spectroscopy of the red damping wing challenging; and (3) GRBs appear crucial to locate typical star-forming galaxies at z>5, and therefore the type of galaxies responsible for the reionization of the universe. Partly based on observations carried out with the ESO telescopes under programs 077.D-0661, 077.A-0667, 078.D-0416, and the large program 177.A-f0591.
Document type Article
Note eprintid: arXiv:0706.1257
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1086/521546
Other links http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2007ApJ...669....1R
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