Detection of GRB 060927 at z = 5.47: Implications for the Use of Gamma-Ray Bursts as Probes of the End of the Dark Ages
A. E. Ruiz-Velasco, H. Swan, E. Troja, D. Malesani, J. P. U. Fynbo, R., L. C. Starling, D. Xu, F. Aharonian, C. Akerlof, M. I. Andersen, M. C. B., Ashley, S. D. Barthelmy, D. Bersier, J. M. Castro Cer\'on, A. J., Castro-Tirado, N. Gehrels, E. G\"o\u{g}\"u\c{s}, J. Gorosabel

TL;DR
This study reports the earliest optical detection of a GRB at high redshift, analyzes its spectrum to measure its distance, and discusses how GRBs can be used to probe the universe's reionization era.
Contribution
It provides the first rest-frame optical detection of a GRB at z>5 and evaluates the potential of GRBs as probes of the early universe and reionization.
Findings
GRB 060927 is at z=5.467, making it the second most distant GRB with spectroscopic redshift.
Detection of a damped Lyalpha profile indicates high neutral hydrogen column density.
GRB afterglows at z>6 are detectable but require rapid NIR follow-up.
Abstract
We report on follow-up observations of the GRB 060927 using the ROTSE-IIIa telescope and a suite of larger aperture ground-based telescopes. An optical afterglow was detected 20 s after the burst, the earliest rest-frame detection of optical emission from any GRB. Spectroscopy performed with the VLT about 13 hours after the trigger shows a continuum break at lambda ~ 8070 A produced by neutral hydrogen absorption at z~5.6. We also detect an absorption line at 8158 A which we interpret as SiII at z=5.467. Hence, GRB 060927 is the second most distant GRB with a spectroscopically measured redshift. The shape of the red wing of the spectral break can be fitted by a damped Lyalpha profile with a column density with log(N_HI/cm^-2) ~ 22.5. We discuss the implications of this work for the use of GRBs as probes of the end of the dark ages and draw three main conclusions: i) GRB afterglows…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
