http://arxiv.org/abs/2205.09675
It is usually thought that long-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are associated with massive star core collapse whereas short-duration GRBs are associated with mergers of compact stellar binaries. The discovery of a kilonova associated with a nearby (350 Mpc) long-duration GRB- GRB 211211A, however, indicates that the progenitor of this long-duration GRB is a compact object merger. Here we report the \emph{Fermi}-LAT detection of gamma-ray ($>100 {\rm \ MeV}$) afterglow emission from GRB 211211A, which lasts $\sim 20000$ s after the burst, the longest event for conventional short-duration GRBs ever detected. We suggest that this gamma-ray emission results mainly from afterglow synchrotron emission. The soft spectrum of GeV emission may arise from a limited maximum synchrotron energy of only a few hundreds of MeV at $\sim 20000$ s. The usually long duration of the GeV emission could be due to the proximity of this GRB and the long deceleration time of the GRB jet that is expanding in a low density cricumburst medium, consistent with the compact stellar merger scenario.
H. Zhang, Y. Huang, J. Zheng, et. al.
Fri, 20 May 22
5/65
Comments: 1 table, 3 figures
You must be logged in to post a comment.