The afterglow of GRB 050709 and the nature of the short-hard gamma-ray bursts.

Journal: Nature
Published:
Abstract

The final chapter in the long-standing mystery of the gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) centres on the origin of the short-hard class of bursts, which are suspected on theoretical grounds to result from the coalescence of neutron-star or black-hole binary systems. Numerous searches for the afterglows of short-hard bursts have been made, galvanized by the revolution in our understanding of long-duration GRBs that followed the discovery in 1997 of their broadband (X-ray, optical and radio) afterglow emission. Here we present the discovery of the X-ray afterglow of a short-hard burst, GRB 050709, whose accurate position allows us to associate it unambiguously with a star-forming galaxy at redshift z = 0.160, and whose optical lightcurve definitively excludes a supernova association. Together with results from three other recent short-hard bursts, this suggests that short-hard bursts release much less energy than the long-duration GRBs. Models requiring young stellar populations, such as magnetars and collapsars, are ruled out, while coalescing degenerate binaries remain the most promising progenitor candidates.

Authors
D Fox, D Frail, P Price, S Kulkarni, E Berger, T Piran, A Soderberg, S Cenko, P Cameron, A Gal Yam, M Kasliwal, D-s Moon, F Harrison, E Nakar, B Schmidt, B Penprase, R Chevalier, P Kumar, K Roth, D Watson, B Lee, S Shectman, M Phillips, M Roth, P Mccarthy, M Rauch, L Cowie, B Peterson, J Rich, N Kawai, K Aoki, G Kosugi, T Totani, H-s Park, A Macfadyen, K Hurley