Insight-HXMT and GECAM-C observations of the brightest-of-all-time GRB 221009A
Zheng-Hua An, S. Antier, Xing-Zi Bi, Qing-Cui Bu, Ce Cai, Xue-Lei Cao,, Anna-Elisa Camisasca, Zhi Chang, Gang Chen, Li Chen, Tian-Xiang Chen, Wen, Chen, Yi-Bao Chen, Yong Chen, Yu-Peng Chen, Michael W. Coughlin, Wei-Wei Cui,, Zi-Gao Dai, T. Hussenot-Desenonges, Yan-Qi Du

TL;DR
This paper presents precise measurements of the brightest gamma-ray burst ever, GRB 221009A, revealing its extraordinary energy output and jet properties through joint observations, suggesting a unique central engine or observational biases.
Contribution
It provides the first accurate measurement of GRB 221009A's emission properties and isotropic energy, and analyzes its jet break and beaming angle using combined Insight-HXMT and GECAM-C data.
Findings
Record-breaking isotropic energy of ~1.5 x 10^55 erg.
Jet break observed around 950 seconds post-trigger.
Beaming-corrected gamma-ray energy typical for long GRBs.
Abstract
GRB 221009A is the brightest gamma-ray burst ever detected since the discovery of this kind of energetic explosions. However, an accurate measurement of the prompt emission properties of this burst is very challenging due to its exceptional brightness. With joint observations of \textit{Insight}-HXMT and GECAM-C, we made an unprecedentedly accurate measurement of the emission during the first 1800 s of GRB 221009A, including its precursor, main emission (ME, which dominates the burst in flux), flaring emission and early afterglow, in the hard X-ray to soft gamma-ray band from 10 keV to 6 MeV. Based on the GECAM-C unsaturated data of the ME, we measure a record-breaking isotropic equivalent energy () of erg, which is about eight times the total rest-mass energy of the Sun. The early afterglow data require a significant jet…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Nuclear Physics and Applications · SAS software applications and methods
