12–23 Jul 2021
Online
Europe/Berlin timezone

Shedding light on the highest energy emission from GRBs with MAGIC observations

21 Jul 2021, 12:00
1h 30m
04

04

Talk GAI | Gamma Ray Indirect Discussion

Speaker

Alessio Berti (INFN)

Description

On 14th January 2019, the MAGIC collaboration achieved the first significant detection at TeV energies of a gamma-ray burst (GRB), namely GRB 190114C. This observation sets the first experimental proof of very high energy (VHE, >~100 GeV) gamma-ray emission in GRBs, after more than 50 years from the first GRB detection and many searches with Cherenkov telescopes in the last decades. The data collected by MAGIC and by more than 20 other ground-based and space-borne instruments, spanning 17 orders of magnitude in energy, revealed a new GeV-TeV emission component in the GRB afterglow. This unprecedented multi-wavelength dataset, including VHE data for the first time, allowed a detailed study of the broadband emission. A one-zone synchrotron-self Compton scenario with internal $\gamma$-$\gamma$ absorption could be used to describe the broadband emission, using parameters compatible with those found in previous studies of GRB afterglows below the GeV energy range. This detection opened a new era in the studies of GRBs, leading to new questions such as the universality of TeV emission in different types of GRBs. In this contribution we will present the GRB follow-up program performed by the MAGIC collaboration, which started more than 15 years ago. We will highlight the results on GRB 190114C, discuss the implications for GRB physics, and report the latest developments and the prospects for future observations of GRBs with the MAGIC telescopes.

Keywords

GRB; TeV GRB; very high energy gamma rays; SSC; IACT

Subcategory Experimental Results
Collaboration MAGIC

Primary authors

Alessio Berti (INFN) Zeljka Bosnjak (FER-University of Zagreb) Stefano Covino (INAF, Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera) Satoshi Fukami (ICRR) Susumu Inoue (RIKEN) Francesco Longo Davide Miceli (University of Udine and INFN Trieste) Razmik Mirzoyan (Max-Planck-Institute for Physics) Elena Moretti (IFAE-BIST) Lara Nava Koji Noda (Institute for Cosmic Ray Research, The University of Tokyo) David Paneque (Max Planck Institute for Physics) Antonio Stamerra (INAF) Yusuke Suda (Max-Planck-Institute for Physics) Ievgen Vovk (Institute for Cosmic Ray Research, The University of Tokyo) on behalf of the MAGIC collaboration

Presentation materials