We use the afterglow detection statistics of the systematic follow-up observations performed with GROND since mid-2007 in order to derive the fraction of "dark bursts" according to different methods, and to distinguish between various scenarios for "dark bursts". For long-duration Swift bursts with a detected X-ray afterglow, we achieve a 90% (35/39) detection rate of optical/NIR afterglows whenever our observations started within less than 240 min after the burst. Complementing our GROND data with Swift/XRT spectra we construct broad-band spectral energy distributions and derive rest-frame extinctions. We detect 25-40% "dark bursts", depending on the definition used. The faint optical afterglow emission of "dark bursts" is mainly due to a combination of two contributing factors: (i) moderate intrinsic extinction at moderate redshifts, and (ii) about 22% of "dark" bursts at redshift >5. © 2011 American Institute of Physics.

Greiner, J., Krühler, T., Klose, S., Afonso, P., Clemens, C., Filgas, R., et al. (2011). The nature of dark gamma-ray bursts. In Gamma ray bursts 2010 (pp.121-124). Melville, New York : AIP [10.1063/1.3621752].

The nature of dark gamma-ray bursts

NARDINI, MARCO;
2011

Abstract

We use the afterglow detection statistics of the systematic follow-up observations performed with GROND since mid-2007 in order to derive the fraction of "dark bursts" according to different methods, and to distinguish between various scenarios for "dark bursts". For long-duration Swift bursts with a detected X-ray afterglow, we achieve a 90% (35/39) detection rate of optical/NIR afterglows whenever our observations started within less than 240 min after the burst. Complementing our GROND data with Swift/XRT spectra we construct broad-band spectral energy distributions and derive rest-frame extinctions. We detect 25-40% "dark bursts", depending on the definition used. The faint optical afterglow emission of "dark bursts" is mainly due to a combination of two contributing factors: (i) moderate intrinsic extinction at moderate redshifts, and (ii) about 22% of "dark" bursts at redshift >5. © 2011 American Institute of Physics.
slide + paper
X-ray sources (astronomical), redshift, telescopes, afterglows
English
GAMMA RAY BURSTS 2010
2010
Gamma ray bursts 2010
978-0-7354-0916-3
2011
1358
121
124
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2011AIPC.1358..121G&link_type=EJOURNAL&db_key=AST&high=
none
Greiner, J., Krühler, T., Klose, S., Afonso, P., Clemens, C., Filgas, R., et al. (2011). The nature of dark gamma-ray bursts. In Gamma ray bursts 2010 (pp.121-124). Melville, New York : AIP [10.1063/1.3621752].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/28225
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