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The Troublesome Broadband Evolution of GRB 061126: Does a Gray Burst Imply Gray Dust?

D. A. Perley et al 2008 ApJ 672 449-464   doi: 10.1086/523929  Help

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D. A. Perley1, J. S. Bloom1, N. R. Butler1, L. K. Pollack2, J. Holtzman3, C. H. Blake4, D. Kocevski1, W. T. Vestrand5, W. Li1, R. J. Foley1, E. Bellm6, H.-W. Chen7, J. X. Prochaska2, D. Starr1, A. V. Filippenko1, E. E. Falco4, A. H. Szentgyorgyi4, J. Wren5, P. R. Wozniak5, R. White5 and J. Pergande5
1 Department of Astronomy, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-3411
2 University of California Observatories/Lick Observatory, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064
3 Department of Astronomy, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM 88003-8001
4 Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, MA 02138
5 Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM 87545
6 Space Sciences Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720
7 Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637

ABSTRACT. We report on observations of a gamma-ray burst (GRB 061126) with an extremely bright (R approx 12 mag at peak) early-time optical afterglow. The optical afterglow is already fading as a power law 22 s after the trigger, with no detectable prompt contribution in our first exposure, which was coincident with a large prompt-emission gamma-ray pulse. The optical-infrared photometric SED is an excellent fit to a power law, but it exhibits a moderate red-to-blue evolution in the spectral index at about 500 s after the burst. This color change is contemporaneous with a switch from a relatively fast decay to slower decay. The rapidly decaying early afterglow is broadly consistent with synchrotron emission from a reverse shock, but a bright forward-shock component predicted by the intermediate- to late-time X-ray observations under the assumptions of standard afterglow models is not observed. Indeed, despite its remarkable early-time brightness, this burst would qualify as a dark burst at later times on the basis of its nearly flat optical-to-X-ray spectral index. Our photometric SED provides no evidence of host galaxy extinction, requiring either large quantities of gray dust in the host system (at redshift 1.1588 ± 0.0006, based on our late-time Keck spectroscopy) or separate physical origins for the X-ray and optical afterglows.

Subject headings: gamma rays: bursts

Print publication: Issue 1 (2008 January 1)
Received 2007 March 22, accepted for publication 2007 September 15

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