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INTEGRAL discovery of a burst with associated radio emission from the magnetar SGR 1935+2154

Authors :
Mereghetti, S.
Savchenko, V.
Ferrigno, C.
Götz, D.
Rigoselli, M.
Tiengo, A.
Bazzano, A.
Bozzo, E.
Coleiro, A.
Courvoisier, T. J. -L.
Doyle, M.
Goldwurm, A.
Hanlon, L.
Jourdain, E.
von Kienlin, A.
Lutovinov, A.
Martin-Carrillo, A.
Molkov, S.
Natalucci, L.
Onori, F.
Panessa, F.
Rodi, J.
Rodriguez, J.
Sánchez-Fernández, C.
Sunyaev, R.
Ubertini, P.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

We report on INTEGRAL observations of the soft $\gamma$-ray repeater SGR 1935+2154 performed between 2020 April 28 and May 3. Several short bursts with fluence of $\sim10^{-7}-10^{-6}$ erg cm$^{-2}$ were detected by the IBIS instrument in the 20-200 keV range. The burst with the hardest spectrum, discovered and localized in real time by the INTEGRAL Burst Alert System, was spatially and temporally coincident with a short and very bright radio burst detected by the CHIME and STARE2 radio telescopes at 400-800 MHz and 1.4 GHz, respectively. Its lightcurve shows three narrow peaks separated by $\sim$29 ms time intervals, superimposed on a broad pulse lasting $\sim$0.6 s. The brightest peak had a delay of 6.5$\pm$1.0 ms with respect to the 1.4 GHz radio pulse (that coincides with the second and brightest component seen at lower frequencies). The burst spectrum, an exponentially cut-off power law with photon index $\Gamma=0.7_{-0.2}^{+0.4}$ and peak energy $E_p=65\pm5$ keV, is harder than those of the bursts usually observed from this and other magnetars. By the analysis of an expanding dust scattering ring seen in X-rays with the {\it Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory} XRT instrument, we derived a distance of 4.4$_{-1.3}^{+2.8}$ kpc for SGR 1935+2154, independent of its possible association with the supernova remnant G57.2+0.8. At this distance, the burst 20-200 keV fluence of $(6.1\pm 0.3)\times10^{-7}$ erg cm$^{-2}$ corresponds to an isotropic emitted energy of $\sim1.4\times10^{39}$ erg. This is the first burst with a radio counterpart observed from a soft $\gamma$-ray repeater and it strongly supports models based on magnetars that have been proposed for extragalactic fast radio bursts.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication on The Astrophysical Journal Letters - revised accepted version

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2005.06335
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/aba2cf