4.8 Article

A very energetic supernova associated with the γ-ray burst of 29 March 2003

Journal

NATURE
Volume 423, Issue 6942, Pages 847-850

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature01750

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Over the past five years evidence has mounted that long-duration (>2 s) gamma-ray bursts (GRBs)-the most luminous of all astronomical explosions-signal the collapse of massive stars in our Universe. This evidence was originally based on the probable association of one unusual GRB with a supernova(1), but now includes the association of GRBs with regions of massive star formation in distant galaxies(2,3), the appearance of supernova-like 'bumps' in the optical afterglow light curves of several bursts(4-6) and lines of freshly synthesized elements in the spectra of a few X-ray afterglows(7). These observations support, but do not yet conclusively demonstrate, the idea that long-duration GRBs are associated with the deaths of massive stars, presumably arising from core collapse. Here we report evidence that a very energetic supernova (a hypernova) was temporally and spatially coincident with a GRB at redshift z=0.1685. The timing of the supernova indicates that it exploded within a few days of the GRB, strongly suggesting that core-collapse events can give rise to GRBs, thereby favouring the 'collapsar' model(8,9).

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