Gamma-Ray Bursts in the Swift Era


Book Description

Washington, DC, 29 November-2 December 2005







The Afterglows of Swift-era Short and Long Gamma-ray Bursts


Book Description

The phenomenon of Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) has been a great mystery since their discovery four decades ago. Even today, over a decade into the "afterglow age", many questions are still unanswered. The canonical picture which satisfies most of the data is that GRBs are produced when a massive celestial body (either a post-main sequence star or merging compact objects) at cosmological distances collapses to a rapidly rotating compact object (a black hole, for example) which launches ultra-relativistic polar jets. The internal dissipation of energy within the jets leads to collimated non-thermal high-energy emission (the actual GRB), whereas shocks created from the interactions of the jets with the interstellar medium create a long-lasting fading afterglow. ...




Gamma-ray Bursts


Book Description

Cosmic gamma ray bursts (GRBs) have fascinated scientists and the public alike since their discovery in the late 1960s. Their story is told here by some of the scientists who participated in their discovery and, after many decades of false starts, solved the problem of their origin. Fourteen chapters by active researchers in the field present a detailed history of the discovery, a comprehensive theoretical description of GRB central engine and emission models, a discussion of GRB host galaxies and a guide to how GRBs can be used as cosmological tools. Observations are grouped into three sets from the satellites CGRO, BeppoSAX and Swift, and followed by a discussion of multi-wavelength observations. This is the first edited volume on GRB astrophysics that presents a fully comprehensive review of the subject. Utilizing the latest research, Gamma-ray Bursts is an essential desktop companion for graduate students and researchers in astrophysics.




Gamma-Ray Bursts


Book Description

Since their discovery was first announced in 1973, gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) have been among the most fascination objects in the universe. While the initial mystery has gone, the fascination continues, sustained by the close connection linking GRBs with some of the most fundamental topics in modern astrophysics and cosmology. Both authors have been active in GRB observations for over two decades and have produced an outstanding account on both the history and the perspectives of GRB research.







Gamma Ray Bursts


Book Description




The Physics of Gamma-Ray Bursts


Book Description

A complete text on the physics of gamma-ray bursts, the most brilliant explosions since the Big Bang.




Gamma-Ray Bursts in the Multi-Messenger Era


Book Description

Gamma-ray Bursts (GRBs) are incredibly energetic, brief flashes of gamma-rays originating from some of the most violent explosions in the universe. The progenitors of the two main classes GRBs, long and short, are thought to be the core collapse of massive stars for long GRBs and the merger of compact objects, like neutron stars and black holes for short GRBs. Though the emission for either class is still not perfectly understood, long GRBs are more well-understood due to their larger energy output and brighter afterglows. The first ever high-energy multi-messenger detection occurred on August 17th, 2017 when a short GRB was observed in coincidence with gravitational waves originating from two neutron stars merging into each other in a galaxy over one hundred million light-years away. This observation had wide spread scientific implications, including the confirmation as compact object mergers as short GRB progenitors, but one surprising result was the lowest measured luminosity of a short GRB by more than 2 orders of magnitude. The revelation of this new population of low-luminosity short GRBs motivates senitive GRB searches to find and study other members of the population. This dissertation focuses on work I have done using data from Swift's Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) as a tool for multi-messenger astrophysics. This includes a targeted analysis using existing tools to search for counterparts to astrophysical events of interest, and a new likelihood-based method of analyzing BAT data I developed to make a more sensitive search for GRBs. This new likelihood-based search is capable of increasing the detection horizon of a GRB 170817A-like burst by [almost equal to]50% compared to the onboard analysis. I will also discuss the results of these searches, including the arcminute-scale localization of 8 GRBs that were not detected onboard BAT.




Gamma-ray Bursts


Book Description

A comprehensive graduate-level review of GRB astrophysics and its history, featuring the latest research by an international team of experts.