Astronomy:GRB 060729
From HandWiki
Right ascension | 06h 21m 31.850s |
---|---|
Declination | −62° 22′ 12.69″ |
Epoch | J2000 |
GRB 060729 was a gamma-ray burst that was first observed on 29 July 2006. It is likely the signal of a type Ic supernova—the core collapse of a massive star.[1] It was also notable for its extraordinarily long X-ray afterglow, detectable 642 days (nearly two years) after the original event.[2] The event was remote, with a redshift of 0.54.[1]
References
- Citations
Sources
- Cano, Z. (2011). "A Tale of Two GRB-SNe at a Common Redshift of z=0.54". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 413 (1): 669–85. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2966.2010.18164.x. Bibcode: 2011MNRAS.413..669C.
- Grupe, D. (2010). "Late-Time Detections of the X-Ray Afterglow of GRB 060729 with Chandra—The Latest Detections Ever of an X-Ray Afterglow". The Astrophysical Journal 711 (2): 1008–1016. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/711/2/1008. Bibcode: 2010ApJ...711.1008G.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GRB 060729.
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