A magnetar giant flare in the nearby starburst galaxy M82
Sandro Mereghetti, Michela Rigoselli, Ruben Salvaterra, Dominik P., Pacholski, James C. Rodi, Diego Gotz, Edoardo Arrigoni, Paolo D'Avanzo,, Christophe Adami, Angela Bazzano, Enrico Bozzo, Riccardo Brivio, Sergio, Campana, Enrico Cappellaro, Jerome Chenevez, Fiore De Luise

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a giant flare from a magnetar in galaxy M82, providing valuable insights into the occurrence and properties of such rare energetic events beyond our galaxy.
Contribution
The study presents the first confident identification of a magnetar giant flare in an external galaxy, expanding understanding of these phenomena beyond the Milky Way.
Findings
Detected a short gamma-ray burst in M82 consistent with a magnetar giant flare.
Spectral and timing analysis supports the magnetar origin hypothesis.
No associated gravitational wave signal was observed.
Abstract
Giant flares, short explosive events releasing up to 10 erg of energy in the gamma-ray band in less than one second, are the most spectacular manifestation of magnetars, young neutron stars powered by a very strong magnetic field, 10 G in the magnetosphere and possibly higher in the star interior. The rate of occurrence of these rare flares is poorly constrained, as only three have been seen from three different magnetars in the Milky Way and in the Large Magellanic Cloud in about 50 years since the beginning of gamma-ray astronomy. This sample can be enlarged by the discovery of extragalactic events, since for a fraction of a second giant flares reach peak luminosities above 10 erg/s, which makes them visible by current instruments up to a few tens of Mpc. However, at these distances they appear similar to, and difficult to distinguish from, regular short…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
