An expanding radio nebula produced by a giant flare from the magnetar SGR 1806–20
/ Authors
B. Gaensler, C. Kouveliotou, J. Gelfand, G. B. Taylor, G. B. Taylor, David Eichler, R. Wijers, J. Granot, E. Ramirez-Ruiz, Y. Lyubarsky
and 11 more authors
R. Hunstead, D. Campbell-Wilson, A. Horst, M. McLaughlin, R. Fender, M. Garrett, K. Newton-McGee, K. Newton-McGee, David M. Palmer, N. Gehrels, Peter M. Woods
/ Abstract
Soft γ-ray repeaters (SGRs) are ‘magnetars’, a small class of slowly spinning neutron stars with extreme surface magnetic fields, B ≈ 1015 gauss (refs 1 , 2 –3). On 27 December 2004, a giant flare was detected from the magnetar SGR 1806 - 20 (ref. 2), only the third such event recorded. This burst of energy was detected by a variety of instruments and even caused an ionospheric disturbance in the Earth's upper atmosphere that was recorded around the globe. Here we report the detection of a fading radio afterglow produced by this outburst, with a luminosity 500 times larger than the only other detection of a similar source. From day 6 to day 19 after the flare from SGR 1806 - 20, a resolved, linearly polarized, radio nebula was seen, expanding at approximately a quarter of the speed of light. To create this nebula, at least 4 × 1043 ergs of energy must have been emitted by the giant flare in the form of magnetic fields and relativistic particles.
Journal: Nature
DOI: 10.1038/nature03498