Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Adria C. Updike is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Adria C. Updike.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

THE AFTERGLOWS OF SWIFT-ERA GAMMA-RAY BURSTS. I. COMPARING PRE-SWIFT AND SWIFT-ERA LONG/SOFT (TYPE II) GRB OPTICAL AFTERGLOWS

D. A. Kann; Sylvio Klose; Bin-Bin Zhang; Daniele Malesani; Ehud Nakar; Alexei S. Pozanenko; A. C. Wilson; N. Butler; P. Jakobsson; S. Schulze; M. Andreev; L. A. Antonelli; I. Bikmaev; Vadim Biryukov; M. Böttcher; R. A. Burenin; J. M. Castro Cerón; A. J. Castro-Tirado; Guido Chincarini; Bethany Elisa Cobb; S. Covino; P. D'Avanzo; Valerio D'Elia; M. Della Valle; A. de Ugarte Postigo; Yu. S. Efimov; P. Ferrero; Dino Fugazza; J. P. U. Fynbo; M. Gålfalk

We have gathered optical photometry data from the literature on a large sample of Swift-era gamma-ray burst (GRB) afterglows including GRBs up to 2009 September, for a total of 76 GRBs, and present an additional three pre-Swift GRBs not included in an earlier sample. Furthermore, we publish 840 additional new photometry data points on a total of 42 GRB afterglows, including large data sets for GRBs 050319, 050408, 050802, 050820A, 050922C, 060418, 080413A, and 080810. We analyzed the light curves of all GRBs in the sample and derived spectral energy distributions for the sample with the best data quality, allowing us to estimate the host-galaxy extinction. We transformed the afterglow light curves into an extinction-corrected z = 1 system and compared their luminosities with a sample of pre-Swift afterglows. The results of a former study, which showed that GRB afterglows clustered and exhibited a bimodal distribution in luminosity space, are weakened by the larger sample. We found that the luminosity distribution of the two afterglow samples (Swift-era and pre-Swift) is very similar, and that a subsample for which we were not able to estimate the extinction, which is fainter than the main sample, can be explained by assuming a moderate amount of line-of-sight host extinction. We derived bolometric isotropic energies for all GRBs in our sample, and found only a tentative correlation between the prompt energy release and the optical afterglow luminosity at 1 day after the GRB in the z = 1 system. A comparative study of the optical luminosities of GRB afterglows with echelle spectra (which show a high number of foreground absorbing systems) and those without, reveals no indication that the former are statistically significantly more luminous. Furthermore, we propose the existence of an upper ceiling on afterglow luminosities and study the luminosity distribution at early times, which was not accessible before the advent of the Swift satellite. Most GRBs feature afterglows that are dominated by the forward shock from early times on. Finally, we present the first indications of a class of long GRBs, which form a bridge between the typical high-luminosity, high-redshift events and nearby low-luminosity events (which are also associated with spectroscopic supernovae) in terms of energetics and observed redshift distribution, indicating a continuous distribution overall.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011

The SEDs and Host Galaxies of the dustiest GRB afterglows

T. Krühler; J. Greiner; Patricia Schady; Sandra Savaglio; P. Afonso; C. Clemens; J. Elliot; R. Filgas; D. Gruber; D. A. Kann; Sylvio Klose; A. Küpcü-Yoldaş; Sheila McBreen; F. E. Olivares; D. Pierini; A. Rossi; M. Nardini; A. Nicuesa Guelbenzu; V. Sudilovsky; Adria C. Updike

Context. The afterglows and host galaxies of long gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) offer unique opportunities to study star-forming galaxies in the high-z Universe. Until recently, however, the information inferred from GRB follow-up observations was mostly limited to optically bright afterglows, biasing all demographic studies against sight-lines that contain large amounts of dust. Aims. Here we present afterglow and host observations for a sample of bursts that are exemplary of previously missed ones because of high visual extinction (A GRB 1 mag) along the sight-line. This facilitates an investigation of the properties, geometry, and location of the absorbing dust of these poorly-explored host galaxies, and a comparison to hosts from optically-selected samples. Methods. This work is based on GROND optical/NIR and Swift/XRT X-ray observations of the afterglows, and multi-color imaging for eight GRB hosts. The afterglow and galaxy spectral energy distributions yield detailed insight into physical properties such as the dust and metal content along the GRB sight-line and galaxy-integrated characteristics such as the host’s stellar mass, luminosity, color-excess, and star-formation rate. Results. For the eight afterglows considered in this study, we report for the first time the redshift of GRB 081109 (z = 0.9787±0.0005), and the visual extinction towards GRBs 081109 (A GRB = 3.4 +0.4 −0.3 mag) and 100621A (A GRB V = 3.8 ± 0.2 mag), which are among the largest ever derived for GRB afterglows. Combined with non-extinguished GRBs, there is a strong anti-correlation between the afterglow’s metal-to-dust ratio and visual extinction. The hosts of the dustiest afterglows are diverse in their properties, but on average redder (� (R − K)AB �∼ 1.6 mag), more luminous (� L �∼ 0.9L ∗ ), and massive (� log M∗[M� ] �∼ 9.8) than the hosts of optically-bright events. Hence, we probe a different galaxy population, suggesting that previous host samples miss most of the massive and metal-rich members. This also indicates that the dust along the sight-line is often related to host properties, and thus probably located in the diffuse ISM or interstellar clouds and not in the immediate GRB environment. Some of the hosts in our sample, are blue, young, or of low stellar mass illustrating that even apparently non-extinguished galaxies possess very dusty sight-lines owing to a patchy dust distribution. Conclusions. The afterglows and host galaxies of the dustiest GRBs provide evidence of a complex dust geometry in star-forming galaxies. In addition, they establish a population of luminous, massive, and correspondingly chemically evolved GRB hosts. This suggests that GRBs trace the global star-formation rate better than studies based on optically selected host samples indicate, and that the previously claimed deficiency of high-mass hosts was at least partially a selection effect.


Nature | 2015

A very luminous magnetar-powered supernova associated with an ultra-long gamma-ray burst

J. Greiner; Paolo A. Mazzali; D. Alexander Kann; Thomas Krühler; E. Pian; Simon Prentice; E Felipe Olivares; A. Rossi; Sylvio Klose; Stefan Taubenberger; F. Knust; Paulo M. J. Afonso; Chris Ashall; J. Bolmer; C. Delvaux; R. Diehl; Jonathan Elliott; Robert Filgas; Johan Peter Uldall Fynbo; John F. Graham; Ana Nicuesa Guelbenzu; Shiho Kobayashi; G. Leloudas; Sandra Savaglio; Patricia Schady; S. Schmidl; T. Schweyer; V. Sudilovsky; M. Tanga; Adria C. Updike

A new class of ultra-long-duration (more than 10,000 seconds) γ-ray bursts has recently been suggested. They may originate in the explosion of stars with much larger radii than those producing normal long-duration γ-ray bursts or in the tidal disruption of a star. No clear supernova has yet been associated with an ultra-long-duration γ-ray burst. Here we report that a supernova (SN 2011kl) was associated with the ultra-long-duration γ-ray burst GRB 111209A, at a redshift z of 0.677. This supernova is more than three times more luminous than type Ic supernovae associated with long-duration γ-ray bursts, and its spectrum is distinctly different. The slope of the continuum resembles those of super-luminous supernovae, but extends further down into the rest-frame ultraviolet implying a low metal content. The light curve evolves much more rapidly than those of super-luminous supernovae. This combination of high luminosity and low metal-line opacity cannot be reconciled with typical type Ic supernovae, but can be reproduced by a model where extra energy is injected by a strongly magnetized neutron star (a magnetar), which has also been proposed as the explanation for super-luminous supernovae.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Optical and near-infrared follow-up observations of four Fermi/LAT GRBs: redshifts, afterglows, energetics, and host galaxies

S. McBreen; T. Krühler; J. Greiner; D. A. Kann; Sandra Savaglio; P. Afonso; C. Clemens; R. Filgas; Sylvio Klose; A. Küpüc Yoldas; A. Rossi; G. P. Szokoly; Adria C. Updike; Aybuke Kupcu Yoldas

Aims. Fermi can measure the spectral properties of gamma-ray bursts over a very large energy range and is opening a new window on the prompt emission of these energetic events. Localizations by the instruments on Fermi in combination with follow-up by Swift provide accurate positions for observations at longer wavelengths leading to the determination of redshifts, the true energy budget, host galaxy properties and facilitate comparison with pre-Fermi bursts. Methods. Multi-wavelength follow-up observations were performed on the afterglows of four bursts with high energy emission detected by Fermi/LAT: GRB 090323, GRB 090328, GRB 090510 and GRB 090902B. They were obtained in the optical/near-infrared bands with GROND mounted at the MPG/ESO 2.2 m telescope and additionally of GRB 090323 in the optical with the 2 m telescope in Tautenburg, Germany. Three of the events are classified as long bursts while GRB 090510 is a well localized short GRB with GeV emission. In addition, host galaxies were detected for three of the four bursts. Spectroscopic follow-up was initiated with the VLT for GRB 090328 and GRB 090510. Results. The afterglow observations in 7 bands are presented for all bursts and their host galaxies are investigated. Knowledge of the distance and the local dust extinction enables comparison of the afterglows of LAT-detected GRBs with the general sample. The spectroscopic redshifts of GRB 090328 and GRB 090510 were determined to be z = 0.7354 ± 0.0003 and z = 0.903 ± 0.001 and dust


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012

Supersolar metal abundances in two galaxies at z ∼ 3.57 revealed by the GRB 090323 afterglow spectrum★

Sandra Savaglio; J. Greiner; T. Krühler; S. McBreen; Dieter H. Hartmann; Adria C. Updike; R. Filgas; Sylvio Klose; P. Afonso; C. Clemens; A. Küpcü Yoldas; V. Sudilovsky; Gyula Pal Szokoly

We report on the surprisingly high metallicity measured in two absorption systems at high redshift, detected in the Very Large Telescope spectrum of the afterglow of the gamma-ray burst GRB090323. The two systems, at redshift z = 3.5673 and z = 3.5774 (separationv � 660 km s −1 ), are dominated by the neutral gas in the interstellar medium of the parent galaxies. From the singly ionized zinc and sulfur, we estimate oversolar metallicities of (Zn/H) = +0.29±0.10 and (S/H) = +0.67±0.34, in the blue and red absorber, respectively. These are the highest metallicities ever measured in galaxies at z > 3. We propose that the two systems trace two galaxies in the process of merging, whose star formation and metallicity are heightened by the interaction. This enhanced star formation might also have triggered the birth of the GRB progenitor. As typically seen in star-forming galaxies, the fine-structure absorption Siii ∗ is detected, both in G0 and G1. From the rest-frame UV emission in the GRB location, we derive a relatively high, not corrected for dust extinction, star-formation rate SFR � 6 M⊙ yr −1 . These properties suggest a possible connection between some high-redshift GRB host galaxies and high-z massive sub-millimeter galaxies, which are characterized by disturbed morphologies and high metallicities. Our result provides additional evidence that the dispersion in the chemical enrichment of the Universe at high redshift is substantial, with the existence of very metal rich galaxies less than two billion years after the Big Bang.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

Evidence for supernova-synthesized dust from the rising afterglow of GRB 071025 at z∼ 5

Daniel A. Perley; J. S. Bloom; Christopher R. Klein; S. Covino; Takeo Minezaki; P. R. Woźniak; W. T. Vestrand; George Grant Williams; Peter A. Milne; N. Butler; Adria C. Updike; T. Krühler; P. Afonso; A. Antonelli; Lennox L. Cowie; P. Ferrero; J. Greiner; Dieter H. Hartmann; Y. Kakazu; A. Küpcü Yoldas; Adam N. Morgan; Paul A. Price; Jason X. Prochaska; Yuzuru Yoshii

We present observations and analysis of the broad-band afterglow of Swift GRB 071025. Using optical and infrared (RIYJHK) photometry, we derive a photometric redshift of 4.4 < z < 5.2; at this redshift our simultaneous multicolour observations begin at ∼30 s after the gamma-ray burst trigger in the host frame, during the initial rising phase of the afterglow. We associate the light-curve peak at ∼580 s in the observer frame with the formation of the forward shock, giving an estimate of the initial Lorentz factor � 0 ∼ 200. The red spectral energy distribution (even in regions not affected by the Lyman α break) provides secure evidence of a large dust column. However, the inferred extinction curve shows a prominent flat component between 2000 and 3000 A in the rest frame, inconsistent with any locally observed template but well fitted by models of dust formed by supernovae. Time-dependent fits to the extinction profile reveal no evidence of dust destruction and limit the decrease in


The Astrophysical Journal | 2008

Multiwavelength Analysis of the Intriguing GRB 061126: The Reverse Shock Scenario and Magnetization

Andreja Gomboc; Shiho Kobayashi; C. Guidorzi; Andrea Melandri; Vanessa Mangano; Boris Sbarufatti; Carole G. Mundell; Patricia Schady; Roger Smith; Adria C. Updike; D. A. Kann; Kuntal Misra; E. Rol; Alexei S. Pozanenko; A. J. Castro-Tirado; G. C. Anupama; D. F. Bersier; M. F. Bode; D. Carter; P. A. Curran; Andrew S. Fruchter; John F. Graham; Dieter H. Hartmann; Mansur A. Ibrahimov; Andrew J. Levan; Alessandro Monfardini; Christopher J. Mottram; P. T. O’Brien; P. Prema; D. K. Sahu

We present a detailed study of the prompt and afterglow emission from Swift GRB 061126 using BAT, XRT, UVOT data and multicolor optical imaging from 10 ground-based telescopes. GRB 061126 was a long burst (T90 = 191 s) with four overlapping peaks in its γ-ray light curve. The X-ray afterglow, observed from 26 minutes to 20 days after the burst, shows a simple power-law decay with αX = 1.290 ± 0.008. Optical observations presented here cover the time range from 258 s (Faulkes Telescope North) to 15 days (Gemini North) after the burst; the decay rate of the optical afterglow shows a steep-to-shallow transition (from α1 = 1.48 ± 0.06 to α2 = 0.88 ± 0.03) approximately 13 minutes after the burst. We suggest the early, steep component is due to a reverse shock and show that the magnetic energy density in the ejecta, expressed as a fraction of the equipartition value, is a few 10 times larger than in the forward shock in the early afterglow phase. The ejecta might be endowed with primordial magnetic fields at the central engine. The optical light curve implies a late-time break at about 1.5 days after the burst, while there is no evidence of the simultaneous break in the X-ray light curve. We model the broadband emission and show that some afterglow characteristics (the steeper decay in X-ray and the shallow spectral index from optical to X-ray) are difficult to explain in the framework of the standard fireball model. This might imply that the X-ray afterglow is due to an additional emission process, such as late-time central engine activity rather than blast-wave shock emission. The possible chromatic break at 1.5 days after the burst would give support to the additional emission scenario.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

GRB 091024A AND THE NATURE OF ULTRA-LONG GAMMA-RAY BURSTS

F. J. Virgili; Carole G. Mundell; Valentin Pal'Shin; C. Guidorzi; R. Margutti; A. Melandri; R. Harrison; Shiho Kobayashi; Ryan Chornock; Arne A. Henden; Adria C. Updike; S. B. Cenko; Nial R. Tanvir; Iain A. Steele; Antonino Cucchiara; Andreja Gomboc; Andrew J. Levan; Z. Cano; Christopher J. Mottram; Neil R. Clay; D. F. Bersier; D. Kopač; J. Japelj; Alexei V. Filippenko; Weidong Li; D. Svinkin; S. Golenetskii; Dieter H. Hartmann; Peter A. Milne; George Grant Williams

We present a broadband study of gamma-ray burst (GRB) 091024A within the context of other ultra-long-duration GRBs. An unusually long burst detected by Konus-Wind (KW), Swift, and Fermi, GRB 091024A has prompt emission episodes covering ~1300 s, accompanied by bright and highly structured optical emission captured by various rapid-response facilities, including the 2 m autonomous robotic Faulkes North and Liverpool Telescopes, KAIT, S-LOTIS, and the Sonoita Research Observatory. We also observed the burst with 8 and 10 m class telescopes and determine the redshift to be z = 1.0924 ± 0.0004. We find no correlation between the optical and γ-ray peaks and interpret the optical light curve as being of external origin, caused by the reverse and forward shock of a highly magnetized jet (RB ≈ 100-200). Low-level emission is detected throughout the near-background quiescent period between the first two emission episodes of the KW data, suggesting continued central-engine activity; we discuss the implications of this ongoing emission and its impact on the afterglow evolution and predictions. We summarize the varied sample of historical GRBs with exceptionally long durations in gamma-rays (gsim1000 s) and discuss the likelihood of these events being from a separate population; we suggest ultra-long GRBs represent the tail of the duration distribution of the long GRB population.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012

A deep search for the host galaxies of gamma-ray bursts with no detected optical afterglow

A. Rossi; Sylvio Klose; P. Ferrero; J. Greiner; L. A. Arnold; E. E. Gonsalves; Dieter H. Hartmann; Adria C. Updike; D. A. Kann; T. Krühler; Eliana Palazzi; Sandra Savaglio; S. Schulze; P. M. J. Afonso; L. Amati; A. J. Castro-Tirado; C. Clemens; R. Filgas; J. Gorosabel; L. K. Hunt; A. Küpcü Yoldas; N. Masetti; M. Nardini; A. Nicuesa Guelbenzu; F. E. Olivares; E. Pian; Patricia Schady; S. Schmidl; A. Yoldas; A. de Ugarte Postigo

Gamma-Ray Bursts can provide information about star formation at high redshifts. Even in the absence of a optical/near-infrared/radio afterglow, the high detection rate of X-ray afterglows by swift/XRT and its localization precision of 2-3 arcsec facilitates the identification and study of GRB host galaxies. We focus on the search for the host galaxies of a sample of 17 bursts with XRT error circles but no detected long-wavelength afterglow. Three of these events can also be classified as truly dark bursts: the observed upper limit on the optical flux of the afterglow was less than expected based on the X-ray flux. Our study is based on deep R and K-band observations performed with ESO/VLT instruments, supported by GROND and NEWFIRM. To be conservative, we searched for host galaxies in an area with a radius twice the 90% swift/XRT error circle. For 15 of the 17 bursts we find at least one galaxy inside the doubled XRT error circle. In seven cases we discover extremely red objects in the error circles. The most remarkable case is the host of GRB 080207 which as a colour of R-K~4.7 mag (AB), one of the reddest galaxies ever associated with a GRB. As a by-product of our study we identify the optical afterglow of GRB 070517A. Optically dim afterglows result from cosmological Lyman drop out and dust extinction, but the former process is only equired for a minority of cases (<1/3). Extinction by dust in the host galaxies might explain all other events. Thereby, a seemingly non-negligible fraction of these hosts are globally dust-enshrouded, extremely red galaxies. This suggests that bursts with optically dim afterglows trace a subpopulation of massive starburst galaxies, which are markedly different from the main body of the GRB host galaxy population, namely the blue, subluminous, compact galaxies.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

A very metal-poor damped Lyman-α system revealed through the most energetic GRB 090926A

Sandra Savaglio; T. Krühler; P. Afonso; J. Greiner; Sylvio Klose; Patricia Schady; S. McBreen; R. Filgas; F. E. Olivares; A. Rossi; Adria C. Updike

We present VLT/FORS2 spectroscopy and GROND optical/near-IR photometry of the afterglow of the bright Fermi/LAT GRB 090926A. The spectrum shows prominent Lyman-� absorption with NHI = 10 21.73±0.07 cm −2 and a multitude of metal lines at a common redshift of z = 2.1062± 0.0004, which we associate with the redshift of the GRB. The metallicity derived from SII is log(Z/Z⊙) � 1.9, one of the lowest values ever found in a GRB Damped Lyman-� (DLA) system. This confirms that the spread of metallicity in GRB-DLAs at z � 2 is at least two orders of magnitude. We argue that this spread in metallicity does not require a similar range in abundances of the GRB progenitors, since the neutral interstellar medium probed by the DLA is expected to be at a significant distance from the explosion site. The hydrogen column density derived from Swift/XRT afterglow spectrum (assuming log(Z/Z⊙) � 1.9) is approx. � 100 times higher than the NHI obtained from the Lyman-alpha absorptions. This suggests either a large column density of ionized gas or a higher metallicity of the circum-burst medium compared to the gas traced by the DLA. We also discuss the afterglow light curve evolution and energetics. The absence of a clear jet-break like steeping until at least 21days post-burst suggests a beaming corrected energy release of E > 3.5×10 52 erg, indicating that GRB 090926A may have been one of the most energetic bursts ever detected. Subject headings: gamma rays: bursts – X-rays: individual (GRB 090926A)

Collaboration


Dive into the Adria C. Updike's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dieter H. Hartmann

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sylvio Klose

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. A. Kann

Spanish National Research Council

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge