A mega-electron volt emission line in the spectrum of a gamma-ray burst.
Maria Edvige RavasioOm Sharan SalafiaGor OganesyanAlessio MeiGiancarlo GhirlandaStefano AscenziBiswajit BanerjeeSamanta MaceraMarica BranchesiPeter G JonkerAndrew J LevanDaniele B MalesaniKatharine B MulreyAndrea GiulianiAnnalisa CelottiGabriele GhiselliniPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2024)
A long gamma-ray burst (GRB) is observed when the collapse of a massive star produces an ultrarelativistic outflow pointed toward Earth. Gamma-ray spectra of long GRBs are smooth, typically modeled by joint power-law segments describing a continuum, with no detected spectral lines. We report a significant (>6σ) narrow emission feature at ~10 mega-electron volts (MeV) in the spectrum of the bright GRB 221009A. Over 80 seconds, it evolves in energy (~12 to ~6 MeV) and in luminosity (~1.1 to <0.43 × 10 50 erg second -1 ) but has a constant width of ~1 MeV. We interpret this feature as a blueshifted spectral line produced by the annihilation of electron-positron pairs, potentially in the same location responsible for emitting the brightest GRB pulses.