4.6 Article

A blast from the infant Universe: The very high-z GRB210905A

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 665, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202243225

Keywords

gamma-ray burst: general; gamma-ray burst: individual: GRB210905A

Funding

  1. INAF project Premiale Supporto Arizona Italia
  2. RSF [21-12-00250]
  3. Spanish National Research Project [RTI2018-098104-J-I00]
  4. PRINMIUR 2017 [20179ZF5KS]
  5. Italian Space Agency [I/004/11/5]
  6. VILLUM FONDEN [16599, 25501]
  7. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Seventh Framework programme (FP7-2007-2013) [725246]
  8. Danish National Research Foundation [140]
  9. Icelandic Research Fund [217690-051]
  10. DFG [HA 1850/28-1]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study presents a detailed follow-up of the high-redshift GRB210905A. The results demonstrate that the energy release and afterglow luminosity of this burst are consistent with those of less distant bursts, indicating that the powering mechanisms and progenitors do not evolve significantly with redshift.
We present a detailed follow-up of the very energetic GRB210905A at a high redshift of z = 6.312 and its luminous X-ray and optical afterglow. Following the detection by Swift and Konus-Wind, we obtained a photometric and spectroscopic follow-up in the optical and near-infrared (NIR), covering both the prompt and afterglow emission from a few minutes up to 20 Ms after burst. With an isotropic gamma-ray energy release of E-iso = 1.27(-0.19)(+0.20) x 10(54) erg, GRB210905A lies in the top similar to 7% of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) in the Konus-Wind catalogue in terms of energy released. Its afterglow is among the most luminous ever observed, and, in particular, it is one of the most luminous in the optical at t >= 0.5 d in the rest frame. The afterglow starts with a shallow evolution that can be explained by energy injection, and it is followed by a steeper decay, while the spectral energy distribution is in agreement with slow cooling in a constant-density environment within the standard fireball theory. A jet break at similar to 46.2 +/- 16.3 d (6.3 +/- 2.2 d rest-frame) has been observed in the X-ray light curve; however, it is hidden in the H band due to a constant contribution from the host galaxy and potentially from a foreground intervening galaxy. In particular, the host galaxy is only the fourth GRB host at z > 6 known to date. By assuming a number density n = 1 cm(-3) and an efficiency eta = 0.2, we derived a half-opening angle of 8.4 degrees +/- 1.0 degrees, which is the highest ever measured for a z greater than or similar to 6 burst, but within the range covered by closer events. The resulting collimation-corrected gamma-ray energy release of similar or equal to 1 x 10(52) erg is also among the highest ever measured. The moderately large half-opening angle argues against recent claims of an inverse dependence of the half-opening angle on the redshift. The total jet energy is likely too large to be sustained by a standard magnetar, and it suggests that the central engine of this burst was a newly formed black hole. Despite the outstanding energetics and luminosity of both GRB210905A and its afterglow, we demonstrate that they are consistent within 2 sigma with those of less distant bursts, indicating that the powering mechanisms and progenitors do not evolve significantly with redshift.

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