Detection of the third class of gamma-ray bursts: magnetar giant flares

Author/Creator ORCID

Date

2021-07-12

Department

Program

Citation of Original Publication

Negro, Michela; Burns, Eric; Detection of the third class of gamma-ray bursts: magnetar giant flares; 37th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC 2021), 12 July, 2021; https://pos.sissa.it/395/630/pdf

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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

Subjects

Abstract

Around 11.4 million years ago a young, highly magnetized neutron star called magnetar, in the Sculptor galaxy released an enormous amount of energy in the form of a giant flare. On April 15th 2020, some of the emitted photons were detected by a number of gamma-ray telescopes around Earth and Mars. While the analysis of this event, GRB 200415A, was interesting in its own right, it resulted in broader implications for both magnetar and gamma-ray burst (GRB) science. The resulting population study of magnetar giant flares (MGFs), led to the unambiguous identification of a distinct population of 4 local (< 5 Mpc) short GRBs. While identified solely based on alignment to nearby star-forming galaxies, their rise time and isotropic energy release are independently inconsistent with the larger short GRB population at > 99.9% confidence. These properties, the host galaxies, and non-detection in gravitational waves all point to an extragalactic MGF origin. The inferred volumetric rates for events above 4 × 10⁴⁴ erg of R = 3.8⁺⁴˙⁰ ₋₃.₁ ×10⁵ Gpc⁻³ yr⁻¹ place MGFs as the dominant gamma-ray transient that have been detected from extragalactic sources. As previously suggested, these rates imply that some magnetars produce multiple MGFs, providing a source of repeating GRBs. The rates and host galaxies favor common core-collapse supernova as key progenitors of magnetars.