GeV emission from a compact binary merger
Alessio Mei, Biswajit Banerjee, Gor Oganesyan, Om Sharan Salafia,, Stefano Giarratana, Marica Branchesi, Paolo D'Avanzo, Sergio Campana,, Giancarlo Ghirlanda, Samuele Ronchini, Amit Shukla, Pawan Tiwari

TL;DR
This paper reports the detection of high-energy gamma-ray emission from GRB 211211A, a long-duration burst likely originating from a binary neutron star merger, with detailed analysis suggesting inverse Compton scattering involving kilonova photons as the emission mechanism.
Contribution
It presents the first evidence of GeV emission in a long-duration GRB from a binary merger, linking kilonova photons to high-energy gamma-ray production.
Findings
Detection of >5 sigma GeV emission starting 1000 s after burst
Excess GeV emission explained by inverse Compton scattering involving kilonova photons
Challenges the typical association of long GRBs with massive star collapses
Abstract
An energetic -ray burst (GRB), GRB 211211A, was observed on 2021 December 11 by the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory. Despite its long duration, typically associated with bursts produced by the collapse of massive stars, the discovery of an optical-infrared kilonova and a quasi-periodic oscillation during a gamma-ray precursor points to a compact object binary merger origin. The complete understanding of this nearby ( 1 billion light-years) burst will significantly impact our knowledge of GRB progenitors and the physical processes that lead to electromagnetic emission in compact binary mergers. Here, we report the discovery of a significant () transient-like emission in the high-energy -rays (HE; E GeV) observed by Fermi/LAT starting at s after the burst. After an initial phase with a roughly constant flux ($\rm \sim 5\times…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Advanced X-ray and CT Imaging
