Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics
Scientific paper
2005-03-11
Astrophys.J. 634 (2005) L89-L92
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
7 pages, 2 figures. Accepted by ApJL, minor changes due to referee comments
Scientific paper
10.1086/498643
The 2004 Dec. 27 giant Gamma-ray flare detected from the magnetar SGR 1806-20 created an expanding radio nebula which we have monitored with the Australia Telescope Compact Array and the Very Large Array. These data indicate that there was an increase in the observed flux ~25 days after the initial flare that lasted for ~8 days, which we believe is the result of ambient material swept-up and shocked by this radio nebula. For a distance to SGR 1806-20 of 15 kpc, using the properties of this rebrightening we infer that the initial blast wave was dominated by baryonic material of mass M>10^{24.5} g. For an initial expansion velocity v~0.7c (as derived in an accompanying paper), we infer this material had an initial kinetic energy E>10^{44.5} ergs. If this material originated from the magnetar itself, it may have emitted a burst of ultra-high energy (E > 1 TeV) neutrinos far brighter than that expected from other astrophysical sources.
Eichler David
Gaensler Bryan M.
Gelfand Joseph D.
Granot Jonathan
Kouveliotou Chryssa
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