Bibcode
García-López, R. J.; Fruck, C.; Frantzen, K.; Font, L.; Fonseca, M. V.; Ferenc, D.; Farina, E.; Elsaesser, D.; Eisenacher, D.; Doro, M.; Dorner, D.; Prester, D. Dominis; Domínguez, A.; Doert, M.; Mendez, C. Delgado; De Lotto, B.; De Caneva, G.; De Angelis, A.; Dazzi, F.; Da Vela, P.; Covino, S.; Cossio, L.; Cortina, J.; Contreras, J. L.; Colombo, E.; Colin, P.; Fidalgo, D. Carreto; Carosi, A.; Carmona, E.; Bretz, T.; Borracci, F.; Bonnoli, G.; Bonnefoy, S.; Boller, A.; Bock, R. K.; Blanch, O.; Biland, A.; Bernardini, E.; Berger, K.; Bednarek, W.; Becerra-Gonzalez, J.; Barrio, J. A.; de Almeida, U. Barres; Babic, A.; Antoranz, P.; Antonelli, L. A.; Ansoldi, S.; Aleksić, J.; Sun, S.; Longo, F.; Tajima, H.; Hayashida, M.; Bouvier, A.; Zanin, R.; Zandanel, F.; Weitzel, Q.; Wagner, R. M.; Vogler, P.; Uellenbeck, M.; Treves, A.; Toyama, T.; Torres, D. F.; Tibolla, O.; Thaele, J.; Teshima, M.; Tescaro, D.; Terzić, T.; Temnikov, P.; Tavecchio, F.; Takalo, L.; Surić, T.; Meucci, M.; Menzel, U.; Mazin, D.; Masbou, J.; Martínez, M.; Mariotti, M.; Marcote, B.; Maraschi, L.; Mannheim, K.; Mankuzhiyil, N.; Maneva, G.; Mallot, K.; Makariev, M.; Lozano, I.; Lorenz, E.; López, M.; López-Oramas, A.; López-Coto, R.; Lombardi, S.; Lindfors, E.; Lewandowska, N.; Lelas, D.; Barbera, A. La; Kushida, J.; Krause, J.; Krähenbühl, T.; Knoetig, M. L.; Kadenius, V.; Idec, W. et al.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 437, Issue 4, p.3103-3111
Advertised on:
2
2014
Citations
20
Refereed citations
16
Description
Indications of a GeV component in the emission from gamma-ray bursts
(GRBs) are known since the Energetic Gamma-Ray Experiment Telescope
observations during the 1990s and they have been confirmed by the data
of the Fermi satellite. These results have, however, shown that our
understanding of GRB physics is still unsatisfactory. The new generation
of Cherenkov observatories and in particular the MAGIC telescope, allow
for the first time the possibility to extend the measurement of GRBs
from several tens up to hundreds of GeV energy range. Both leptonic and
hadronic processes have been suggested to explain the possible GeV/TeV
counterpart of GRBs. Observations with ground-based telescopes of very
high energy (VHE) photons (E > 30 GeV) from these sources are going
to play a key role in discriminating among the different proposed
emission mechanisms, which are barely distinguishable at lower energies.
MAGIC telescope observations of the GRB 090102 (z = 1.547) field and
Fermi Large Area Telescope data in the same time interval are analysed
to derive upper limits of the GeV/TeV emission. We compare these results
to the expected emissions evaluated for different processes in the
framework of a relativistic blastwave model for the afterglow.
Simultaneous upper limits with Fermi and a Cherenkov telescope have been
derived for this GRB observation. The results we obtained are compatible
with the expected emission although the difficulties in predicting the
HE and VHE emission for the afterglow of this event makes it difficult
to draw firmer conclusions. Nonetheless, MAGIC sensitivity in the energy
range of overlap with space-based instruments (above about 40 GeV) is
about one order of magnitude better with respect to Fermi. This makes
evident the constraining power of ground-based observations and shows
that the MAGIC telescope has reached the required performance to make
possible GRB multiwavelength studies in the VHE range.
Related projects
Particle Astrophysics
The MAGIC Collaboration is integrated by 20 research institutes and university departments from Armenia, Bulgaria, Finland, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain, Switzerland and USA. The collaboration comprises two 17m diameter telescopes, located at the Roque de los Muchachos Observatory, designed to measure the Cherenkov radiation associated with
Ramón
García López