We analyze the BeppoSAX measurements of the prompt and afterglow emission of the Gamma-ray burst GRB 010222. Among 45 GRBs detected with the Wide Field Cameras on BeppoSAX, the 40-700 keV fluence of (9.3+/-0.3)x10^(-5) ergs cm-2 is only surpassed by GRB 990123. In terms of the isotropic 20-2000 keV energy output of 7.8x10^53 ergs, it ranks third of all GRBs with measured distances. Since this burst is so bright, the data provide complete and valuable coverage up to 65 hr after the event, except for a gap between 3.5 and 8.0 hr. The 2-10 keV flux history shows clear signs of a break, which is consistent with a break seen in the optical, and provides supporting evidence for the achromatic nature of the break. An explanation for the break in the context of a collimated expansion is not straightforward. Rather, a model is favored whereby the fireball is braked to the nonrelativistic regime quickly (within a fraction of day) by a dense (~10^6 cm-3) circumburst medium. This implies that, after a mild beaming correction, GRB 010222 may be the most energetic burst observed thus far. The X-ray decay index after the break is 1.33+/-0.04, the spectral index 0.97+/-0.05. The decay is, with unprecedented accuracy, identical to that observed in the optical.

BeppoSAX Measurements of the Bright Gamma-Ray Burst 010222

2001

Abstract

We analyze the BeppoSAX measurements of the prompt and afterglow emission of the Gamma-ray burst GRB 010222. Among 45 GRBs detected with the Wide Field Cameras on BeppoSAX, the 40-700 keV fluence of (9.3+/-0.3)x10^(-5) ergs cm-2 is only surpassed by GRB 990123. In terms of the isotropic 20-2000 keV energy output of 7.8x10^53 ergs, it ranks third of all GRBs with measured distances. Since this burst is so bright, the data provide complete and valuable coverage up to 65 hr after the event, except for a gap between 3.5 and 8.0 hr. The 2-10 keV flux history shows clear signs of a break, which is consistent with a break seen in the optical, and provides supporting evidence for the achromatic nature of the break. An explanation for the break in the context of a collimated expansion is not straightforward. Rather, a model is favored whereby the fireball is braked to the nonrelativistic regime quickly (within a fraction of day) by a dense (~10^6 cm-3) circumburst medium. This implies that, after a mild beaming correction, GRB 010222 may be the most energetic burst observed thus far. The X-ray decay index after the break is 1.33+/-0.04, the spectral index 0.97+/-0.05. The decay is, with unprecedented accuracy, identical to that observed in the optical.
2001
IASF - Istituto di astrofisica spaziale e fisica cosmica
Gamma Rays: Bursts
X-Rays: General
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/164216
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