Behind the dust curtain: the spectacular case of GRB 160623A
F. Pintore, A. Tiengo, S. Mereghetti, G. Vianello, R. Salvaterra, P., Esposito, E. Costantini, A. Giuliani, Z. Bosnjak

TL;DR
This study used X-ray observations of GRB 160623A to precisely measure distances to multiple dust layers in our galaxy through dust-scattering rings, providing detailed insights into the dust distribution along the line of sight.
Contribution
It presents a novel, highly precise method for measuring dust layer distances using X-ray dust-scattering rings around a gamma-ray burst afterglow.
Findings
Six dust layers identified at specific distances with high precision.
Column densities of dust layers estimated, revealing a diffuse, extended dust region.
Dust properties align with independent gas and reddening data.
Abstract
We report on the X-ray dust-scattering features observed around the afterglow of the gamma ray burst GRB 160623A. With an XMM-Newton observation carried out ~2 days after the burst, we found evidence of at least six rings, with angular size expanding between ~2 and 9 arcmin, as expected for X-ray scattering of the prompt GRB emission by dust clouds in our Galaxy. From the expansion rate of the rings, we measured the distances of the dust layers with extraordinary precision: 528.1 +\- 1.2 pc, 679.2 +\- 1.9 pc, 789.0 +\- 2.8 pc, 952 +\- 5 pc, 1539 +\- 20 pc and 5079 +\- 64 pc. A spectral analysis of the ring spectra, based on an appropriate dust-scattering model (BARE-GR-B from Zubko et al. 2004}) and the estimated burst fluence, allowed us to derive the column density of the individual dust layers, which are in the range 7x10^20-1.5x10^22 cm^-2. The farthest dust-layer (i.e. the one…
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