Bibcode
Castro-Tirado, A. J.; Jelínek, M.; Pandey, S. B.; McBreen, S.; de Jong, J.; Sahu, D. K.; Ferrero, P.; Caballero, J. A.; Gorosabel, J.; Kann, D. A.; Klose, S.; de Ugarte Postigo, A.; Anupama, G. C.; Gry, C.; Guziy, S.; Srividya, S.; Valdivielso, L.; Vanniarajan, S.; Henden, A. A.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 459, Issue 3, December I 2006, pp.763-767
Fecha de publicación:
12
2006
Revista
Número de citas
9
Número de citas referidas
8
Descripción
Aims.We present multiwavelength observations of the gamma-ray burst GRB
051028 detected by HETE-2 in order to derive its afterglow emission
parameters and to determine the reason for its optical faintness when
compared to other events. Methods: .Observations were taken in the
optical (2.0 m Himalayan Chandra Telescope, 1.34 m Tautenburg, 4.2 m
William Herschel Telescope) and in X-rays (Swift/XRT) between 2.7 h and
~10 days after the onset of the event. Results: .The data can be
interpreted by collimated emission in a jet with a typical value of p =
2.4 which is moving in a homogeneous interstellar medium and with a
cooling frequency νc still above the X-rays at 0.5 days
after the burst onset. GRB 051028 can be classified as a "gray" or
"potentially dark" GRB. On the basis of the combined optical and
Swift/XRT data, we conclude that the reason for the optical dimness is
not extra absorption in the host galaxy, but rather the GRB taking place
at high-redshift. We also notice the very striking similarity with the
optical lightcurve of GRB 050730, a burst with a spectroscopic redshift
of 3.967, although GRB 051028 is ~3 mag fainter. We suggest that the
bumps could be explained by multiple energy injection episodes and that
the burst is intrinsically faint when compared to the average afterglows
detected since 1997. The non-detection of the host galaxy down to R =
25.1 is also consistent with the burst arising at high redshift,
compatible with the published pseudo-z of 3.7 ± 1.8.