Title: The extremely high peak energy of GRB 110721A in the context of a dissipative photosphere synchrotron emission model Authors: P. Veres, B.-B. Zhang, P. Mészáros
The Fermi observations of GRB 110721A (The Fermi LAT Collaboration et al. 2012) have revealed an unusually high peak energy \sim 15 MeV in the first time bin of the prompt emission. We find that an interpretation is unlikely in terms of internal shock models, and confirm that a standard black-body photospheric model also falls short. We show that dissipative photospheric synchrotron models, on the other hand, are able to accommodate such high peak values.
Title: GRB110721A: An extreme peak energy and signatures of the photosphere Authors: The Fermi LAT Collaboration, the GBM Collaboration, A. Pe'er
GRB110721A was observed by the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope using its two instruments the Large Area Telescope (LAT) and the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM). The burst consisted of one major emission episode which lasted for ~24.5 seconds (in the GBM) and had a peak flux of 5.7±0.2 x 10^{-5} erg/s/cm˛. The time-resolved emission spectrum is best modeled with a combination of a Band function and a blackbody spectrum. The peak energy of the Band component was initially 15±2 MeV, which is the highest value ever detected in a GRB. This measurement was made possible by combining GBM/BGO data with LAT Low Energy Events to achieve continuous 10--100 MeV coverage. The peak energy later decreased as a power law in time with an index of -1.89±0.10. The temperature of the blackbody component also decreased, starting from ~80 keV, and the decay showed a significant break after ~2 seconds. The spectrum provides strong constraints on the standard synchrotron model, indicating that alternative mechanisms may give rise to the emission at these energies.