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Spectral properties of gamma-ray bursts observed by the Suzaku wide-band all-sky monitor
Author(s) -
Norisuke Ohmori,
K. Yamaoka,
M. Yamauchi,
Y. Urata,
M. Ohno,
Satoshi Sugita,
K. Hurley,
M. Tashiro,
Y. Fukazawa,
W. Iwakiri,
Daisuke Katsukura,
M. Kokubun,
Kazuo Makishima,
Souta Murakami,
Y. E. Nakagawa,
K. Nakazawa,
Katsuya Odaka,
K. Takahashi,
Tadayuki Takahashi,
Y. Terada
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
publications of the astronomical society of japan
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.99
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 2053-051X
pISSN - 0004-6264
DOI - 10.1093/pasj/psz054
Subject(s) - gamma ray burst , physics , astrophysics , spectral line , fermi gamma ray space telescope , light curve , photon , sky , power law , fluence , spectral index , astronomy , optics , nuclear physics , irradiation , statistics , mathematics
We have systematically studied the spectral properties of 302 localized gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) observed by the Suzaku wide-band all-sky monitor (WAM) from 2005 August to 2010 December. The energy spectra in the 100–5000 keV range integrated over the entire emission and the 1 s peak were fitted by three models: a single power law, a power law with an exponential cutoff (CPL), and the GRB Band function (GRB). Most of the burst spectra were well fitted by a single power law. The average photon index α was −2.11 and −1.73 for long and short bursts, respectively. For the CPL and GRB models, the low-energy and high-energy photon indices (α and β) for the entire emission spectra were consistent with previous measurements. The averages of the α and β were −0.90 and −2.65 for long-duration GRBs, while the average α was −0.55 and the β was not well constrained for short-duration GRBs. However, the average peak energy Epeak was 645 and 1286 keV for long- and short-duration GRBs respectively, which are higher than previous Fermi/GBM measurements (285 keV and 736 keV). The α and Epeak of the 1 s peak spectra were larger, i.e., the spectra were harder, than the total fluence spectra. Spectral simulations based on Fermi-GBM results suggest that the higher Epeaks measured by the Suzaku WAM could be due to detector selection bias, mainly caused by the limited energy range above 100 keV.

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