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Title: | The long-active afterglow of GRB 210204A: detection of the most delayed flares in a gamma-ray burst |
Authors: | Kumar, Harsh Gupta, Rahul Saraogi, Divita Ahumada, Tomás Andreoni, Igor Anupama, G. C Aryan, Amar Barway, Sudhanshu Bhalerao, Varun Chandra, Poonam Coughlin, Michael W Dimple Dutta, Anirban Ghosh, Ankur Ho, Anna Y. Q Kool, E. C Kumar, Amit Medford, Michael S Misra, Kuntal Pandey, Shashi B Perley, Daniel A Riddle, Reed Ror, Amit Kumar Setiadi, Jason M Yao, Yuhan |
Keywords: | Methods: data analysis Gamma-ray burst: general Gamma-ray burst: individual: GRB 210204A |
Issue Date: | Jun-2022 |
Publisher: | Oxford University Press on behalf of Royal Astronomical Society |
Citation: | Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Vol. 513, No. 2, pp. 2777–2793 |
Abstract: | We present results from extensive broadband follow-up of GRB 210204A over the period of 30 d. We detect optical flares in the afterglow at 7.6 × 105 s and 1.1 × 106 s after the burst: the most delayed flaring ever detected in a GRB afterglow. At the source redshift of 0.876, the rest-frame delay is 5.8 × 105 s (6.71 d). We investigate possible causes for this flaring and conclude that the most likely cause is a refreshed shock in the jet. The prompt emission of the GRB is within the range of typical long bursts: it shows three disjoint emission episodes, which all follow the typical GRB correlations. This suggests that GRB 210204A might not have any special properties that caused late-time flaring, and the lack of such detections for other afterglows might be resulting from the paucity of late-time observations. Systematic late-time follow-up of a larger sample of GRBs can shed more light on such afterglow behaviour. Further analysis of the GRB 210204A shows that the late-time bump in the light curve is highly unlikely due to underlying SNe at redshift (z) = 0.876 and is more likely due to the late-time flaring activity. The cause of this variability is not clearly quantifiable due to the lack of multiband data at late-time constraints by bad weather conditions. The flare of GRB 210204A is the latest flare detected to date. |
Description: | Restricted Access |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8018 |
ISSN: | 1365-2966 |
Appears in Collections: | IIAP Publications |
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The long-active afterglow of GRB 210204A detection of the most delayed flares in a gamma-ray burst.pdf Restricted Access | 6.73 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open Request a copy |
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