iPTF14yb: THE FIRST DISCOVERY OF A GAMMA-RAY BURST AFTERGLOW INDEPENDENT OF A HIGH-ENERGY TRIGGER
/ Authors
S. B. Cenko, A. Urban, D. Perley, A. Horesh, A. Corsi, D. Fox, Yi Cao, M. Kasliwal, A. Lien, I. Arcavi
and 27 more authors
J. Bloom, N. Butler, A. Cucchiara, J. A. Diego, A. Filippenko, A. Gal-yam, N. Gehrels, Leonid Georgiev, J. González, J. Graham, J. Greiner, D. A. Kann, C. Klein, F. Knust, S. Kulkarni, A. Kutyrev, R. Laher, William H. Lee, P. Nugent, J. Prochaska, E. Ramirez-Ruiz, M. Richer, A. Rubin, Y. Urata, K. Varela, A. Watson, P. Wozniak
/ Abstract
We report here the discovery by the Intermediate Palomar Transient Factory (iPTF) of iPTF14yb, a luminous ( M r ≈ − 27.8 ?> mag), cosmological (redshift 1.9733), rapidly fading optical transient. We demonstrate, based on probabilistic arguments and a comparison with the broader population, that iPTF14yb is the optical afterglow of the long-duration gamma-ray burst GRB 140226A. This marks the first unambiguous discovery of a GRB afterglow prior to (and thus entirely independent of) an associated high-energy trigger. We estimate the rate of iPTF14yb-like sources (i.e., cosmologically distant relativistic explosions) based on iPTF observations, inferring an all-sky value of R rel = 610 ?> yr−1 (68% confidence interval of 110–2000 yr−1). Our derived rate is consistent (within the large uncertainty) with the all-sky rate of on-axis GRBs derived by the Swift satellite. Finally, we briefly discuss the implications of the nondetection to date of bona fide “orphan” afterglows (i.e., those lacking detectable high-energy emission) on GRB beaming and the degree of baryon loading in these relativistic jets.
Journal: The Astrophysical Journal Letters