GRB 120711A: an intense INTEGRAL burst with long-lasting soft gamma-ray emission and a powerful optical flash
A. Martin-Carrillo, L. Hanlon, M. Topinka, A. P. LaCluyz\'e, V., Savchenko, D. A. Kann, A. S. Trotter, S. Covino, T. Kr\"uhler, J. Greiner, S., McGlynn, D. Murphy, P. Tisdall, S. Meehan, C. Wade, B. McBreen, D. E., Reichart, D. Fugazza, J. B. Haislip, A. Rossi, P. Schady

TL;DR
This paper presents a detailed analysis of GRB 120711A, an intense gamma-ray burst with long-lasting soft gamma-ray emission and a powerful optical flash, revealing insights into its progenitor environment and emission mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive multi-wavelength analysis of GRB 120711A, modeling its long-lasting emission as synchrotron radiation from a stratified wind environment, indicating a massive star progenitor.
Findings
Long-lasting soft gamma-ray emission detected for at least 10 ks.
Emission consistent with synchrotron radiation from a forward shock.
Progenitor likely a Wolf-Rayet star in a wind-like environment.
Abstract
A long and intense gamma-ray burst (GRB) was detected by INTEGRAL on July 11 2012 with a duration of ~115s and fluence of 2.8x10^-4 erg cm^-2 in the 20 keV-8 MeV energy range. GRB 120711A was at z~1.405 and produced soft gamma-ray emission (>20 keV) for at least ~10 ks after the trigger. The GRB was observed by several ground-based telescopes that detected a powerful optical flash peaking at an R-band brightness of ~11.5 mag at ~126 s after the trigger. We present a comprehensive temporal and spectral analysis of the long-lasting soft gamma-ray emission detected in the 20-200 keV band with INTEGRAL, the Fermi/LAT post-GRB detection above 100 MeV, the soft X-ray afterglow from XMM-Newton, Chandra, and Swift and the optical/NIR detections from Watcher, Skynet, GROND, and REM. We modelled the long-lasting soft gamma-ray emission using the standard afterglow scenario, which indicates a…
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