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An expanding radio nebula produced by a giant flare from the magnetar SGR 1806-20
Authors:Gaensler B M  Kouveliotou C  Gelfand J D  Taylor G B  Eichler D  Wijers R A M J  Granot J  Ramirez-Ruiz E  Lyubarsky Y E  Hunstead R W  Campbell-Wilson D  van der Horst A J  McLaughlin M A  Fender R P  Garrett M A  Newton-McGee K J  Palmer D M  Gehrels N  Woods P M
Institution:Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, 60 Garden Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA. bgaensler@cfa.harvard.edu
Abstract:Soft gamma-ray repeaters (SGRs) are 'magnetars', a small class of slowly spinning neutron stars with extreme surface magnetic fields, B approximately 10(15) 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 x 10(43) ergs of energy must have been emitted by the giant flare in the form of magnetic fields and relativistic particles.
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