FERMI constraints on the high energy, similar to 1 GeV, emission of long gamma ray bursts

D. Guetta, E. Pian, E. Waxman

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Abstract

Aims. We investigate the constraints imposed on the luminosity function (LF) of long duration gamma ray bursts (LGRBs) by the flux distribution of bursts detected by the GBM at ∼1 MeV, and the implications of the non detection of the vast majority, ∼95%, of the LGRBs at higher energy, ∼1 GeV, by the LAT detector. Methods. We find a LF that is consistent with those determined by BATSE and Swift. The non detections by LAT set upper limits on the ratio R of the prompt fluence at ∼1 GeV to that at ∼1 MeV. The upper limits are more stringent for brighter bursts, with upper limits on R<{0.1,0.3,1} for {5,30,60}% of the bursts. This implies that for most bursts the prompt ∼1 GeV emission may be comparable to the ∼1 MeV emission, but can not dominate it. The value of R is not universal: the measured values and upper limits imply that R ranges over (at least) an order of magnitude around 0.1. For several bright bursts with reliable determination of the photon spectral index at ∼1 MeV, the LAT non detection implies an upper limit to the ∼100 MeV flux which is <0.1 of the flux obtained by extrapolating the ∼1 MeV flux to high energy. Results. For the widely accepted models, in which the ∼1 MeV power-law photon spectrum reflects the power-law energy distribution of fast cooling electrons, this suggests that either the electron energy distribution does not follow a power-law over a wide energy range, or that the high energy photons are absorbed. Requiring an order unity pair production optical depth at 100 MeV sets an upper limit for the Lorentz factor, 10<2.5.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberA53
JournalAstronomy and Astrophysics
Volume525
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2011
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • gamma rays: general

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