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Dive into the research topics where A. J. van der Horst is active.

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Featured researches published by A. J. van der Horst.


Science | 2011

An Extremely Luminous Panchromatic Outburst from the Nucleus of a Distant Galaxy

Andrew J. Levan; Nial R. Tanvir; S. B. Cenko; Daniel A. Perley; K. Wiersema; J. S. Bloom; Andrew S. Fruchter; A. de Ugarte Postigo; P. T. O’Brien; N. Butler; A. J. van der Horst; G. Leloudas; Adam N. Morgan; Kuntal Misra; Geoffrey C. Bower; J. Farihi; R. L. Tunnicliffe; Maryam Modjaz; Jeffrey M. Silverman; J. Hjorth; C. C. Thöne; A. Cucchiara; J. M. Castro Cerón; A. J. Castro-Tirado; J. A. Arnold; M. Bremer; Jean P. Brodie; Thomas L. Carroll; Michael C. Cooper; P. A. Curran

A recent bright emission observed by the Swift satellite is due to the sudden accretion of a star onto a massive black hole. Variable x-ray and γ-ray emission is characteristic of the most extreme physical processes in the universe. We present multiwavelength observations of a unique γ-ray–selected transient detected by the Swift satellite, accompanied by bright emission across the electromagnetic spectrum, and whose properties are unlike any previously observed source. We pinpoint the event to the center of a small, star-forming galaxy at redshift z = 0.3534. Its high-energy emission has lasted much longer than any γ-ray burst, whereas its peak luminosity was ∼100 times higher than bright active galactic nuclei. The association of the outburst with the center of its host galaxy suggests that this phenomenon has its origin in a rare mechanism involving the massive black hole in the nucleus of that galaxy.


Nature | 2008

Broadband observations of the naked-eye gamma-ray burst GRB 080319B

Judith Lea Racusin; S. V. Karpov; Marcin Sokolowski; Jonathan Granot; Xue-Feng Wu; V. Pal’shin; S. Covino; A. J. van der Horst; S. R. Oates; Patricia Schady; R. J. E. Smith; J. R. Cummings; Rhaana L. C. Starling; Lech Wiktor Piotrowski; Bin-Bin Zhang; P. A. Evans; S. T. Holland; K. Malek; M. T. Page; L. Vetere; R. Margutti; C. Guidorzi; Atish Kamble; P. A. Curran; A. P. Beardmore; C. Kouveliotou; Lech Mankiewicz; Andrea Melandri; P. T. O’Brien; Kim L. Page

Long-duration γ-ray bursts (GRBs) release copious amounts of energy across the entire electromagnetic spectrum, and so provide a window into the process of black hole formation from the collapse of massive stars. Previous early optical observations of even the most exceptional GRBs (990123 and 030329) lacked both the temporal resolution to probe the optical flash in detail and the accuracy needed to trace the transition from the prompt emission within the outflow to external shocks caused by interaction with the progenitor environment. Here we report observations of the extraordinarily bright prompt optical and γ-ray emission of GRB 080319B that provide diagnostics within seconds of its formation, followed by broadband observations of the afterglow decay that continued for weeks. We show that the prompt emission stems from a single physical region, implying an extremely relativistic outflow that propagates within the narrow inner core of a two-component jet.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

Discovery of the nearby long, soft GRB 100316D with an associated supernova

Rhaana L. C. Starling; K. Wiersema; Andrew J. Levan; Takanori Sakamoto; D. F. Bersier; Paolo Goldoni; S. R. Oates; A. Rowlinson; Sergio Campana; Jesper Sollerman; Nial R. Tanvir; Daniele Malesani; Johan Peter Uldall Fynbo; S. Covino; Paolo D'Avanzo; Paul T. O'Brien; Kim L. Page; J. P. Osborne; S. D. Vergani; S. Barthelmy; D. N. Burrows; Z. Cano; P. A. Curran; M. De Pasquale; Valerio D'Elia; P. A. Evans; H. Flores; Andrew S. Fruchter; Peter Marcus Garnavich; N. Gehrels

We report the Swift discovery of the nearby long, soft gamma-ray burst GRB 100316D, and the subsequent unveiling of its low-redshift host galaxy and associated supernova. We derive the redshift of the event to be z = 0.0591 +/- 0.0001 and provide accurate astrometry for the gamma-ray burst (GRB) supernova (SN). We study the extremely unusual prompt emission with time-resolved gamma-ray to X-ray spectroscopy and find that the spectrum is best modelled with a thermal component in addition to a synchrotron emission component with a low peak energy. The X-ray light curve has a remarkably shallow decay out to at least 800 s. The host is a bright, blue galaxy with a highly disturbed morphology and we use Gemini-South, Very Large Telescope and Hubble Space Telescope observations to measure some of the basic host galaxy properties. We compare and contrast the X-ray emission and host galaxy of GRB 100316D to a subsample of GRB-SNe. GRB 100316D is unlike the majority of GRB-SNe in its X-ray evolution, but resembles rather GRB 060218, and we find that these two events have remarkably similar high energy prompt emission properties. Comparison of the host galaxies of GRB-SNe demonstrates, however, that there is a great diversity in the environments in which GRB-SNe can be found. GRB 100316D is an important addition to the currently sparse sample of spectroscopically confirmed GRB-SNe, from which a better understanding of long GRB progenitors and the GRB-SN connection can be gleaned.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

IDENTIFICATION AND PROPERTIES OF THE PHOTOSPHERIC EMISSION IN GRB090902B

F. Ryde; Magnus Axelsson; Bing Zhang; S. McGlynn; Asaf Pe'er; Christoffer Lundman; S. Larsson; M. Battelino; B. Zhang; E. Bissaldi; J. Bregeon; M. S. Briggs; J. Chiang; F. de Palma; S. Guiriec; Josefin Larsson; F. Longo; S. McBreen; N. Omodei; Vahe Petrosian; Robert D. Preece; A. J. van der Horst

The Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope observed the bright and long GRB090902B, lying at a redshift of z = 1.822. Together the Large Area Telescope (LAT) and the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) cover th ...


Scopus | 2011

Discovery of the nearby long, soft GRB100316D with an associated supernova

Randall C. Starling; K. Wiersema; A. Rowlinson; Nial R. Tanvir; Paul T. O'Brien; Kim L. Page; J. P. Osborne; P. A. Evans; C. P. Hurkett; Andrew J. Levan; T. Sakamoto; S. T. Holland; N. Gehrels; M. Stamatikos; D. F. Bersier; Z. Cano; Paolo Goldoni; S. R. Oates; P. A. Curran; M. De Pasquale; N. P. M. Kuin; Sergio Campana; S. Covino; Paolo D'Avanzo; C. C. Thöne; Jesper Sollerman; Daniele Malesani; J. P. U. Fynbo; J. Hjorth; S. D. Vergani

We report the Swift discovery of the nearby long, soft gamma-ray burst GRB 100316D, and the subsequent unveiling of its low-redshift host galaxy and associated supernova. We derive the redshift of the event to be z = 0.0591 +/- 0.0001 and provide accurate astrometry for the gamma-ray burst (GRB) supernova (SN). We study the extremely unusual prompt emission with time-resolved gamma-ray to X-ray spectroscopy and find that the spectrum is best modelled with a thermal component in addition to a synchrotron emission component with a low peak energy. The X-ray light curve has a remarkably shallow decay out to at least 800 s. The host is a bright, blue galaxy with a highly disturbed morphology and we use Gemini-South, Very Large Telescope and Hubble Space Telescope observations to measure some of the basic host galaxy properties. We compare and contrast the X-ray emission and host galaxy of GRB 100316D to a subsample of GRB-SNe. GRB 100316D is unlike the majority of GRB-SNe in its X-ray evolution, but resembles rather GRB 060218, and we find that these two events have remarkably similar high energy prompt emission properties. Comparison of the host galaxies of GRB-SNe demonstrates, however, that there is a great diversity in the environments in which GRB-SNe can be found. GRB 100316D is an important addition to the currently sparse sample of spectroscopically confirmed GRB-SNe, from which a better understanding of long GRB progenitors and the GRB-SN connection can be gleaned.


Nature | 2005

An Expanding Radio Nebula Produced by a Giant Flare from the Magnetar SGR 1806-20

B. M. Gaensler; C. Kouveliotou; Joseph D. Gelfand; G. B. Taylor; David Eichler; R. A. M. J. Wijers; Jonathan Granot; E. Ramirez-Ruiz; Yuri Lyubarsky; Richard W. Hunstead; D. Campbell-Wilson; A. J. van der Horst; M. A. McLaughlin; R. P. Fender; M. A. Garrett; K. J. Newton-McGee; D. Palmer; N. Gehrels; P. M. Woods

Soft γ-ray repeaters (SGRs) are ‘magnetars’, a small class of slowly spinning neutron stars with extreme surface magnetic fields, B ≈ 1015 gauss (refs 1 , 2 –3). On 27 December 2004, a giant flare was detected from the magnetar SGR 1806 - 20 (ref. 2), only the third such event recorded. This burst of energy was detected by a variety of instruments and even caused an ionospheric disturbance in the Earths upper atmosphere that was recorded around the globe. Here we report the detection of a fading radio afterglow produced by this outburst, with a luminosity 500 times larger than the only other detection of a similar source. From day 6 to day 19 after the flare from SGR 1806 - 20, a resolved, linearly polarized, radio nebula was seen, expanding at approximately a quarter of the speed of light. To create this nebula, at least 4 × 1043 ergs of energy must have been emitted by the giant flare in the form of magnetic fields and relativistic particles.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2007

GAMMA-RAY BURST AFTERGLOWS AS PROBES OF ENVIRONMENT AND BLAST WAVE PHYSICS. I. ABSORPTION BY HOST-GALAXY GAS AND DUST

Rhaana L. C. Starling; R. A. M. J. Wijers; Klaas Wiersema; E. Rol; P. A. Curran; C. Kouveliotou; A. J. van der Horst; M. H. M. Heemskerk

We use a new approach to obtain limits on the absorbing columns toward an initial sample of 10 long gamma-ray bursts observed with BeppoSAX and selected on the basis of their good optical and near-infrared (NIR) coverage, from simultaneous fits to NIR, optical, and X-ray afterglow data, in count space and including the effects of metallicity. In no cases is a Milky Way-like (MW) extinction preferred when testing MW, LMC, and SMC extinction laws. The 2175 A bump would in principle be detectable in all these afterglows, but is not present in the data. An SMC-like gas-to-dust ratio or lower value can be ruled out for four of the hosts analyzed here (assuming SMC metallicity and extinction law), while the remainder of the sample have too large an error to discriminate. We provide a more accurate estimate of the line-of-sight extinction and improve on the uncertainties for the majority of the extinction measurements made in previous studies of this sample. We discuss this method for determining extinction values in comparison with the most commonly employed existing methods.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

A tale of two GRB-SNe at a common redshift of z=0.54

Z. Cano; D. F. Bersier; C. Guidorzi; Raffaella Margutti; K. M. Svensson; Shiho Kobayashi; Andrea Melandri; K. Wiersema; Alexei S. Pozanenko; A. J. van der Horst; Guy G. Pooley; Alberto Fernandez-Soto; A. J. Castro-Tirado; A. de Ugarte Postigo; Myungshin Im; A. P. Kamble; D. K. Sahu; J. Alonso-Lorite; G. C. Anupama; Joanne Bibby; M. J. Burgdorf; Neil R. Clay; P. A. Curran; T. A. Fatkhullin; Andrew S. Fruchter; Peter Marcus Garnavich; Andreja Gomboc; J. Gorosabel; John F. Graham; U. K. Gurugubelli

We present ground-based and Hubble Space Telescope optical observations of the optical transients (OTs) of long-duration Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) 060729 and 090618, both at a redshift of z= 0.54. For GRB 060729, bumps are seen in the optical light curves (LCs), and the late-time broad-band spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of the OT resemble those of local Type Ic supernovae (SNe). For GRB 090618, the dense sampling of our optical observations has allowed us to detect well-defined bumps in the optical LCs, as well as a change in colour, that are indicative of light coming from a core-collapse SN. The accompanying SNe for both events are individually compared with SN1998bw, a known GRB supernova, and SN1994I, a typical Type Ic supernova without a known GRB counterpart, and in both cases the brightness and temporal evolution more closely resemble SN1998bw. We also exploit our extensive optical and radio data for GRB 090618, as well as the publicly available Swift-XRT data, and discuss the properties of the afterglow at early times. In the context of a simple jet-like model, the afterglow of GRB 090618 is best explained by the presence of a jet-break at t-to > 0.5 d. We then compare the rest-frame, peak V-band absolute magnitudes of all of the GRB and X-Ray Flash (XRF)-associated SNe with a large sample of local Type Ibc SNe, concluding that, when host extinction is considered, the peak magnitudes of the GRB/XRF-SNe cannot be distinguished from the peak magnitudes of non-GRB/XRF SNe. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

THE OPTICALLY UNBIASED GRB HOST (TOUGH) SURVEY. VI. RADIO OBSERVATIONS AT z ≲ 1 AND CONSISTENCY WITH TYPICAL STAR-FORMING GALAXIES*

M. J. Michałowski; Atish Kamble; J. Hjorth; Daniele Malesani; R. F. Reinfrank; L. Bonavera; J. M. Castro Cerón; E. Ibar; James Dunlop; J. P. U. Fynbo; M. A. Garrett; P. Jakobsson; David L. Kaplan; T. Krühler; Andrew J. Levan; M. Massardi; Sabyasachi Pal; Jesper Sollerman; Nial R. Tanvir; A. J. van der Horst; D. Watson; K. Wiersema

The objective of this paper is to determine the level of obscured star formation activity and dust attenuation in a sample of gamma-ray burst (GRB) hosts, and to test the hypothesis that GRB hosts have properties consistent with those of the general star-forming galaxy populations. We present a radio continuum survey of all z 500 M ☉ yr-1. For the undetected hosts the mean radio flux (<35 μJy 3σ) corresponds to an average SFR < 15 M ☉ yr-1. Moreover, gsim 88% of the z lsim 1 GRB hosts have ultraviolet dust attenuation A UV < 6.7 mag (visual attenuation AV < 3 mag). Hence, we did not find evidence for large dust obscuration in a majority of GRB hosts. Finally, we found that the distributions of SFRs and A UV of GRB hosts are consistent with those of Lyman break galaxies, Hα emitters at similar redshifts, and of galaxies from cosmological simulations. The similarity of the GRB population with other star-forming galaxies is consistent with the hypothesis that GRBs, a least at z lsim 1, trace a large fraction of all star formation, and are therefore less biased indicators than once thought.


Scopus | 2011

A tale of two GRB-SNe at a common redshift of z = 0.54

D. F. Bersier; C. Guidorzi; Shiho Kobayashi; Andrea Melandri; Joanne Bibby; Neil R. Clay; Christopher J. Mottram; Carole G. Mundell; Emma E. Small; Roger Smith; Iain A. Steele; R. Margutti; K. M. Svensson; Andrew J. Levan; A. Volvach; K. Wiersema; Paul T. O'Brien; Rhaana L. C. Starling; Nial R. Tanvir; Alexei S. Pozanenko; V. Loznikov; A. J. van der Horst; Guy G. Pooley; Alberto Fernandez-Soto; A. J. Castro-Tirado; J. Gorosabel; A. de Ugarte Postigo; Myungshin Im; Young-Beom Jeon; W-K. Park

We present ground-based and Hubble Space Telescope optical observations of the optical transients (OTs) of long-duration Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) 060729 and 090618, both at a redshift of z= 0.54. For GRB 060729, bumps are seen in the optical light curves (LCs), and the late-time broad-band spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of the OT resemble those of local Type Ic supernovae (SNe). For GRB 090618, the dense sampling of our optical observations has allowed us to detect well-defined bumps in the optical LCs, as well as a change in colour, that are indicative of light coming from a core-collapse SN. The accompanying SNe for both events are individually compared with SN1998bw, a known GRB supernova, and SN1994I, a typical Type Ic supernova without a known GRB counterpart, and in both cases the brightness and temporal evolution more closely resemble SN1998bw. We also exploit our extensive optical and radio data for GRB 090618, as well as the publicly available Swift-XRT data, and discuss the properties of the afterglow at early times. In the context of a simple jet-like model, the afterglow of GRB 090618 is best explained by the presence of a jet-break at t-to > 0.5 d. We then compare the rest-frame, peak V-band absolute magnitudes of all of the GRB and X-Ray Flash (XRF)-associated SNe with a large sample of local Type Ibc SNe, concluding that, when host extinction is considered, the peak magnitudes of the GRB/XRF-SNe cannot be distinguished from the peak magnitudes of non-GRB/XRF SNe. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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C. Kouveliotou

Universities Space Research Association

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K. Wiersema

University of Leicester

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E. Rol

University of Amsterdam

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A. Rowlinson

University of Amsterdam

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Jonathan Granot

Open University of Israel

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