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Featured researches published by Zhi-Ping Jin.


Nature Communications | 2015

A possible macronova in the late afterglow of the long-short burst GRB 060614

Bin Yang; Zhi-Ping Jin; Xiang Li; S. Covino; Xian-Zhong Zheng; Kenta Hotokezaka; Yi-Zhong Fan; Tsvi Piran; Da-Ming Wei

Long-duration (>2 s) γ-ray bursts that are believed to originate from the death of massive stars are expected to be accompanied by supernovae. GRB 060614, that lasted 102 s, lacks a supernova-like emission down to very stringent limits and its physical origin is still debated. Here we report the discovery of near-infrared bump that is significantly above the regular decaying afterglow. This red bump is inconsistent with even the weakest known supernova. However, it can arise from a Li-Paczyński macronova—the radioactive decay of debris following a compact binary merger. If this interpretation is correct, GRB 060614 arose from a compact binary merger rather than from the death of a massive star and it was a site of a significant production of heavy r-process elements. The significant ejected mass favours a black hole–neutron star merger but a double neutron star merger cannot be ruled out.


Nature | 2017

Spectroscopic identification of r-process nucleosynthesis in a double neutron star merger

E. Pian; Paolo D'Avanzo; Stefano Benetti; M. Branchesi; E. Brocato; S. Campana; Enrico Cappellaro; S. Covino; Valerio D'Elia; J. P. U. Fynbo; F. Getman; G. Ghirlanda; G. Ghisellini; A. Grado; G. Greco; J. Hjorth; C. Kouveliotou; Andrew J. Levan; L. Limatola; Daniele Malesani; Paolo A. Mazzali; A. Melandri; P. Møller; L. Nicastro; Eliana Palazzi; S. Piranomonte; A. Rossi; O. S. Salafia; J. Selsing; G. Stratta

The merger of two neutron stars is predicted to give rise to three major detectable phenomena: a short burst of γ-rays, a gravitational-wave signal, and a transient optical–near-infrared source powered by the synthesis of large amounts of very heavy elements via rapid neutron capture (the r-process). Such transients, named ‘macronovae’ or ‘kilonovae’, are believed to be centres of production of rare elements such as gold and platinum. The most compelling evidence so far for a kilonova was a very faint near-infrared rebrightening in the afterglow of a short γ-ray burst at redshift z = 0.356, although findings indicating bluer events have been reported. Here we report the spectral identification and describe the physical properties of a bright kilonova associated with the gravitational-wave source GW170817 and γ-ray burst GRB 170817A associated with a galaxy at a distance of 40 megaparsecs from Earth. Using a series of spectra from ground-based observatories covering the wavelength range from the ultraviolet to the near-infrared, we find that the kilonova is characterized by rapidly expanding ejecta with spectral features similar to those predicted by current models. The ejecta is optically thick early on, with a velocity of about 0.2 times light speed, and reaches a radius of about 50 astronomical units in only 1.5 days. As the ejecta expands, broad absorption-like lines appear on the spectral continuum, indicating atomic species produced by nucleosynthesis that occurs in the post-merger fast-moving dynamical ejecta and in two slower (0.05 times light speed) wind regions. Comparison with spectral models suggests that the merger ejected 0.03 to 0.05 solar masses of material, including high-opacity lanthanides.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013

Dust extinctions for an unbiased sample of gamma-ray burst afterglows

S. Covino; A. Melandri; R. Salvaterra; Sergio Campana; S. D. Vergani; M. G. Bernardini; P. D’Avanzo; V. D’Elia; Dino Fugazza; G. Ghirlanda; G. Ghisellini; Andreja Gomboc; Zhi-Ping Jin; T. Krühler; Daniele Malesani; L. Nava; B. Sbarufatti; Gianpiero Tagliaferri

In this paper, we compute rest-frame extinctions for the afterglows of a sample of Swift gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) complete in redshift. The selection criteria of the sample are based on observational high-energy parameters of the prompt emission and therefore our sample should not be biased against dusty sight-lines. It is therefore expected that our inferences hold for the general population of GRBs. Our main result is that the optical/near-infrared extinction of GRB afterglows in our sample does not follow a single distribution. 87 per cent of the events are absorbed by less than 2 mag, and 50 per cent suffer from less than 0.3-0.4 mag extinction. The remaining 13 per cent of the afterglows are highly absorbed. The true percentage of GRB afterglows showing high absorption could be even higher since a fair fraction of the events without reliable redshift measurement are probably part of this class. These events may be due to highly dusty molecular clouds/star-forming regions associated with the GRB progenitor or along the afterglow line of sight, and/or due to massive dusty host galaxies. No clear evolution in the dust extinction properties is evident within the redshift range of our sample, although the largest extinctions are at z similar to 1.5-2, close to the expected peak of the star formation rate. Those events classified as dark are characterized, on average, by a higher extinction than typical events in the sample. A correlation between optical/near-infrared extinction and hydrogen-equivalent column density based on X-ray studies is shown, although the observed N-H appears to be well in excess compared to those observed in the Local Group. Dust extinction does not seem to correlate with GRB energetics or luminosity.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2007

GRB 060418 and 060607A: the medium surrounding the progenitor and the weak reverse shock emission

Zhi-Ping Jin; Yi-Zhong Fan

We constrain the circumburst medium profile with the rise behaviour of the very early afterglow light curves of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). Using this method, we find a constant and low-density medium profile for GRB 060418 and GRB 060607A, which is consistent with the inference from the late afterglow data. In addition, we show that the absence of the infrared flashes in these two afterglows is consistent with the standard hydrodynamical external reverse shock model. Although a highly magnetized model can explain the data, it is no longer demanded. A weak reverse shock in the standard hydrodynamical model is achievable if the typical synchrotron frequency is already below the band at the shock-crossing time.


Nature Communications | 2016

The Macronova in GRB 050709 and the GRB-macronova connection

Zhi-Ping Jin; Kenta Hotokezaka; Xiang Li; Masaomi Tanaka; P. D’Avanzo; Yi-Zhong Fan; S. Covino; Da-Ming Wei; Tsvi Piran

GRB 050709 was the first short Gamma-ray Burst (sGRB) with an identified optical counterpart. Here we report a reanalysis of the publicly available data of this event and the discovery of a Li-Paczynski macronova/kilonova that dominates the optical/infrared signal at t>2.5 days. Such a signal would arise from 0.05 r-process material launched by a compact binary merger. The implied mass ejection supports the suggestion that compact binary mergers are significant and possibly main sites of heavy r-process nucleosynthesis. Furthermore, we have reanalysed all afterglow data from nearby short and hybrid GRBs (shGRBs). A statistical study of shGRB/macronova connection reveals that macronova may have taken place in all these GRBs, although the fraction as low as 0.18 cannot be ruled out. The identification of two of the three macronova candidates in the I-band implies a more promising detection prospect for ground-based surveys.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

The Light Curve of the Macronova Associated with the Long-Short Burst GRB 060614

Zhi-Ping Jin; Xiang Li; Z. Cano; S. Covino; Yi-Zhong Fan; Da-Ming Wei

The Swift-detected GRB 060614 was a unique burst that straddles an imaginary divide between long- and short-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), and its physical origin has been heavily debated over the years. Recently, a distinct, very soft F814W-band excess at t similar to 13.6 days after the burst was identified in a joint-analysis of VLT and Hubble Space Telescope optical afterglow data of GRB 060614, which has been interpreted as evidence for an accompanying macronova (also called a kilonova). Under the assumption that the afterglow data in the time interval of 1.7-3.0 days after the burst are due to external FS emission, when this assumption is extrapolated to later times it is found that there is an excess of flux in several multi-band photometric observations. This component emerges at similar to 4 days after the burst, and it may represent the first time that a multi-epoch/band light curve of a macronova has been obtained. The macronova associated with GRB 060614 peaked at t less than or similar to 4 days after the burst, which is significantly earlier than that observed for a supernova associated with a long-duration GRB. Due to the limited data, no strong evidence for a temperature evolution is found. We derive a conservative estimate of the macronova rate of similar to 16.3(8.2)(+16.3) Gpc(-3) yr(-1), implying a promising prospect for detecting the gravitational wave radiation from compact-object mergers by upcoming Advanced LIGO/VIRGO/KAGRA detectors (i.e., the rate is R-GW similar to 0.5(-0.25)(+0.5)(D/200 Mpc)3 yr(-1)).


Nature | 2014

Circular polarization in the optical afterglow of GRB 121024A

K. Wiersema; S. Covino; Kenji Toma; A. J. van der Horst; K. Varela; M. Min; J. Greiner; Rhaana L. C. Starling; Nial R. Tanvir; R. A. M. J. Wijers; Sergio Campana; P. A. Curran; Yi-Zhong Fan; J. P. U. Fynbo; Javier Gorosabel; Andreja Gomboc; Diego Gotz; J. Hjorth; Zhi-Ping Jin; Shiho Kobayashi; C. Kouveliotou; Carole G. Mundell; P. T. O’Brien; E. Pian; A. Rowlinson; D. M. Russell; R. Salvaterra; S. di Serego Alighieri; G. Tagliaferri; S. D. Vergani

Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are most probably powered by collimated relativistic outflows (jets) from accreting black holes at cosmological distances. Bright afterglows are produced when the outflow collides with the ambient medium. Afterglow polarization directly probes the magnetic properties of the jet when measured minutes after the burst, and it probes the geometric properties of the jet and the ambient medium when measured hours to days after the burst. High values of optical polarization detected minutes after the burst of GRB 120308A indicate the presence of large-scale ordered magnetic fields originating from the central engine (the power source of the GRB). Theoretical models predict low degrees of linear polarization and no circular polarization at late times, when the energy in the original ejecta is quickly transferred to the ambient medium and propagates farther into the medium as a blast wave. Here we report the detection of circularly polarized light in the afterglow of GRB 121024A, measured 0.15 days after the burst. We show that the circular polarization is intrinsic to the afterglow and unlikely to be produced by dust scattering or plasma propagation effects. A possible explanation is to invoke anisotropic (rather than the commonly assumed isotropic) electron pitch-angle distributions, and we suggest that new models are required to produce the complex microphysics of realistic shocks in relativistic jets.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

HIGH-ENERGY EMISSION OF GRB 130427A: EVIDENCE FOR INVERSE COMPTON RADIATION

Yi-Zhong Fan; P. H. T. Tam; Fu-Wen Zhang; Yun-Feng Liang; Hao-Ning He; Bei Zhou; Rui-Zhi Yang; Zhi-Ping Jin; Da-Ming Wei

A nearby superluminous burst GRB 130427A was simultaneously detected by six gamma-ray space telescopes (Swift, the Fermi GLAST Burst Monitor (GBM)/Large Area Telescope, Konus-Wind, SPI-ACS/INTEGRAL, AGILE, and RHESSI) and by three RAPTOR full-sky persistent monitors. The isotropic gamma-ray energy release is similar to 10(54) erg, rendering it the most powerful explosion among gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) with a redshift z 1 TeV neutrinos from GRB 130427A by IceCube are discussed.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

GRB 081029: a gamma-ray burst with a multi-component afterglow

Stephen T. Holland; Massimiliano De Pasquale; Ji-Rong Mao; Takanori Sakamoto; Patricia Schady; S. Covino; Yi-Zhong Fan; Zhi-Ping Jin; Paolo D'Avanzo; A. Antonelli; Valerio D'Elia; Guido Chincarini; F. Fiore; S. B. Pandey; Bethany Elisa Cobb

We present an analysis of the unusual optical light curve of the gamma-ray burst GRB 081029, a long-soft burst with a redshift of z = 3.8479. We combine X-ray and optical observations from the Swift X-Ray Telescope and the Swift UltraViolet/Optical Telescope with ground-based optical and infrared data obtained using the REM, ROTSE, and CTIO 1.3 m telescopes to construct a detailed data set extending from 86 s to similar to 100000 s after the BAT trigger. Our data cover a wide energy range from 10 keV to 0.77 eV (1.24 angstrom-16000 angstrom). The X-ray afterglow shows a shallow initial decay followed by a rapid decay starting at about 18000 s. The optical and infrared afterglow, however, shows an uncharacteristic rise at about 3000 s that does not correspond to any feature in the X-ray light curve. Our data are not consistent with synchrotron radiation from a jet interacting with an external medium, a two-component jet, or continuous energy injection from the central engine. We find that the optical light curves can be broadly explained by a collision between two ejecta shells within a two-component jet. A growing number of gamma-ray-burst afterglows are consistent with complex jets, which suggests that some (or all) gamma-ray-burst jets are complex and will require detailed modeling to fully understand them.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

GRB 081007 AND GRB 090424: THE SURROUNDING MEDIUM, OUTFLOWS, AND SUPERNOVAE

Zhi-Ping Jin; S. Covino; Massimo Della Valle; P. Ferrero; Dino Fugazza; Daniele Malesani; Andrea Melandri; E. Pian; R. Salvaterra; D. F. Bersier; Sergio Campana; Z. Cano; A. J. Castro-Tirado; Paolo D'Avanzo; Johan Peter Uldall Fynbo; Andreja Gomboc; Javier Gorosabel; C. Guidorzi; Joshua B. Haislip; J. Hjorth; Shiho Kobayashi; Aaron Patrick Lacluyze; G. Marconi; Paolo A. Mazzali; Carole G. Mundell; S. Piranomonte; Daniel E. Reichart; R. Sánchez-Ramírez; Robert J. Smith; I. A. Steele

We discuss the results of the analysis of multi-wavelength data for the afterglows of GRB 081007 and GRB 090424, two bursts detected by Swift. One of them, GRB 081007, also shows a spectroscopically confirmed supernova, SN 2008hw, which resembles SN 1998bw in its absorption features, while the maximum magnitude may be fainter, up to 0.7 mag, than observed in SN 1998bw. Bright optical flashes have been detected in both events, which allows us to derive solid constraints on the circumburst-matter density profile. This is particularly interesting in the case of GRB 081007, whose afterglow is found to be propagating into a constant-density medium, yielding yet another example of a gamma-ray burst (GRB) clearly associated with a massive-star progenitor which did not sculpt the surroundings with its stellar wind. There is no supernova component detected in the afterglow of GRB 090424, likely due to the brightness of the host galaxy, comparable to the Milky Way. We show that the afterglow data are consistent with the presence of both forward-and reverse-shock emission powered by relativistic outflows expanding into the interstellar medium. The absence of optical peaks due to the forward shock strongly suggests that the reverse-shock regions should be mildly magnetized. The initial Lorentz factor of outflow of GRB 081007 is estimated to be Gamma similar to 200, while for GRB 090424 a lower limit of Gamma > 170 is derived. We also discuss the prompt emission of GRB 081007, which consists of just a single pulse. We argue that neither the external forward-shock model nor the shock-breakout model can account for the prompt emission data and suggest that the single-pulse-like prompt emission may be due to magnetic energy dissipation of a Poynting-flux-dominated outflow or to a dissipative photosphere.

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Da-Ming Wei

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yi-Zhong Fan

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xiang Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Fu-Wen Zhang

Guilin University of Technology

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Yun-Feng Liang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Hao Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Y. Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yuan-Chuan Zou

Huazhong University of Science and Technology

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Hao-Ning He

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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