GRB 970228 Revisited: Evidence for a Supernova in the Light Curve and Late Spectral Energy Distribution of the Afterglow

Published 1999 July 28 © 1999. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation Daniel E. Reichart 1999 ApJ 521 L111 DOI 10.1086/312203

1538-4357/521/2/L111

Abstract

At the time of its discovery, the optical and X-ray afterglow of GRB 970228 appeared to be a ringing endorsement of the previously untried relativistic fireball model of gamma-ray burst (GRB) afterglows, but now that nearly a dozen optical afterglows to GRBs have been observed, the wavering light curve and reddening spectrum of this afterglow make it perhaps the most difficult of the observed afterglows to reconcile with the fireball model. In this Letter, we argue that this afterglow's unusual temporal and spectral properties can be attributed to a supernova that overtook the light curve nearly 2 weeks after the GRB. This is the strongest case yet for a GRB/supernova connection. It strengthens the case that a supernova also dominated the late afterglow of GRB 980326 and the case that GRB 980425 is related to SN 1998bw.

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10.1086/312203