Discovery of the short gamma-ray burst GRB 050709 |
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Authors: | Villasenor J S Lamb D Q Ricker G R Atteia J-L Kawai N Butler N Nakagawa Y Jernigan J G Boer M Crew G B Donaghy T Q Doty J Fenimore E E Galassi M Graziani C Hurley K Levine A Martel F Matsuoka M Olive J-F Prigozhin G Sakamoto T Shirasaki Y Suzuki M Tamagawa T Vanderspek R Woosley S E Yoshida A Braga J Manchanda R Pizzichini G Takagishi K Yamauchi M |
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Affiliation: | MIT Kavli Institute, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 70 Vassar Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA. jsvilla@space.mit.edu |
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Abstract: | Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) fall into two classes: short-hard and long-soft bursts. The latter are now known to have X-ray and optical afterglows, to occur at cosmological distances in star-forming galaxies, and to be associated with the explosion of massive stars. In contrast, the distance scale, the energy scale and the progenitors of the short bursts have remained a mystery. Here we report the discovery of a short-hard burst whose accurate localization has led to follow-up observations that have identified the X-ray afterglow and (for the first time) the optical afterglow of a short-hard burst; this in turn led to the identification of the host galaxy of the burst as a late-type galaxy at z = 0.16 (ref. 10). These results show that at least some short-hard bursts occur at cosmological distances in the outskirts of galaxies, and are likely to be caused by the merging of compact binaries. |
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