GRB 011121: A Massive Star Progenitor
Abstract
Of the cosmological gamma-ray bursts, GRB 011121 has the lowest redshift, z = 0.36. More importantly, the multicolor excess in the afterglow detected in the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) light curves is compelling observational evidence of an underlying supernova. Here we present near-infrared and radio observations of the afterglow, and from our comprehensive afterglow modeling, we find evidence favoring a wind-fed circumburst medium. Lacking X-ray data, we are unable to conclusively measure the mass-loss rate, M, but obtain an estimate, M ~ 2 × 10^(-7)/vw_3 M☉ yr^(-1), where vw_3 is the speed of the wind from the progenitor in units of 10^3 km s^(-1). This M is similar to that inferred for the progenitor of the Type Ibc supernova SN 1998bw that has been associated with the peculiar burst GRB 980425. Our data, taken in conjunction with the HST results of Bloom et al., provide a consistent picture: the long-duration GRB 011121 had a massive star progenitor that exploded as a supernova at about the same time as the gamma-ray burst event. Finally, we note that the gamma-ray profile of GRB 011121 is similar to that of GRB 980425.
Additional Information
© 2002 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2002 March 26; accepted 2002 May 2; published 2002 May 20. P. A. P. gratefully acknowledges an Alex Rodgers Traveling Scholarship. GRB research at Caltech (S. R. K., S. G. D., F. A. H., R. S.) is supported by grants from NSF and NASA. J. S. B. is a Fannie and Hertz Foundation Fellow. R. S. holds a holds a Senior Fairchild Fellowship. K. H. is grateful for Ulysses support under JPL contract 958056 and for IPN support under NASA grants FDNAG 5-11451 and NAG 5-10710. We thank R. Chevalier for useful discussion and E. Mazets, S. Golenetskii, and the Konus team for the use of the Konus data. Finally, we thank the staff of Las Campanas Observatory and the Australia Telescope National Facility for their assistance, and we applaud the heroic efforts of the staff of the AAT in obtaining these observations during the commissioning of IRIS2.Attached Files
Published - Price_2002_ApJ_572_L51.pdf
Submitted - 0203467.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 98709
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20190918-083156797
- Alex Rodgers Traveling Scholarship
- NSF
- Fannie and John Hertz Foundation
- Sherman Fairchild Foundation
- JPL
- 958056
- NASA
- FDNAG 5-11451
- NASA
- NAG 5-10710
- Created
-
2019-09-18Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
-
2021-11-16Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- TAPIR, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences (GPS)