Harvard University

Astronomy 97hf. Introductory Tutorial

Catalog Number: 6604
Matias Zaldarriaga and members of the Department

February 20th & 27th, 2004, 2-4 p.m.; Room C-34 - Prof. Kris Stanek

Gamma-Ray Bursts

SUMMARY: About three times a day a powerful burst of gamma-ray radiation reaches Earth's atmosphere from space. These so called Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs), first discovered by a military satellite program in 1960s, continue to be a mystery, although few thousand papers were written about them in the past 30 years. We will discuss what is known about GRBs and what lies in the future.


DO THE FOLLOWING IN PREPARATION FOR OUR FIRST MEETING:

(1) READ:

For a great introduction to GRBs read the materials from the "75th Anniversary Astronomical Debate on the Distance Scale to Gamma-Ray Bursts". This debate, between Bohdan Paczynski (Princeton) and Don Lamb (Chicago), took place in April 1995. Please read all of the following articles (you can pick up hardcopies near my office at 60 Garden St., P-317):

An Introduction by Robert Nemiroff
The 1920 Shapley-Curtis Discussion: Background, Issues, And Outcome by Virginia Trimble
Gamma-Ray Bursts: An Overview by Gerald Fishman
How Far Away Are Gamma-Ray Bursters? by Bohdan Paczynski
The Distance Scale To Gamma-Ray Bursts by Donald Q. Lamb
Concluding Remarks by Martin Rees

Who won?

(2) SEARCH:

Use the astro-ph electronic preprints archive to search for papers with the word "GRB" or "gamma ray burst" in the title and/or abstract. Try both to see which finds more papers. How many GRB papers were there in total since 1994? How many in each year after 1994? Do you see any trends? What happened?


DO THE FOLLOWING IN PREPARATION FOR OUR SECOND MEETING:

(1) READ:

The GRBs "afterglow revolution" of 1997 was made possible by an Italian-Dutch satellite called BeppoSAX: visit and peruse its website.

Read in some detail the following (you will have to go to the "paper" library, as these are not available electronically, or try to find them on astro-ph):

Discovery of an X-ray afterglow associated with the gamma-ray burst of 28 February 1997 by E. Costa et al. (1997, Nature, 387, 783).
Transient optical emission from the error box of the gamma-ray burst of 28 February 1997 by J. van Paradijs et al. (1997, Nature, 386, 686).
Spectral constraints on the redshift of the optical counterpart to the gamma-ray burst of 8 May 1997 by M. Metzger et al. (1997, Nature, 387, 878).

Or read one of the following reviews:

Optical/Multiwavelength Observations of GRB Afterglows by T. J. Galama or
The afterglows of gamma-ray bursts by S. R. Kulkarni.

(2) SEE:

Check some of the GRBs which were studied here at the CfA, especially GRBs 990510, 000301C and 011121. Read our press releases for GRB 011121 and for GRB 030329.

(3) FORESEE:

See what is coming:

SWIFT: a multiwavelength observatory for gamma-ray astronomy (to be launched in 2004).


HOMEWORK (due our next meeting at 2 p.m., February 27th, 2004):

The optical afterglow of the GRB 990123 was observerd by the ROTSE project to be (briefly) as bright as 9th magnitude. The redshift of this burst was established at z=1.6. What would be its peak brightness (in magnitudes) if GRB 990123 was located inside our Galaxy at a distance of 1 kpc? What instrument would you observe it with?


Questions or Comments? Send me an e-mail to kstanek@cfa.harvard.edu.

This page was last updated on Mon Feb 23 14:04:41 EST 2004