A nearby long gamma-ray burst from a merger of compact objects.
Eleonora TrojaChristopher L FryerBrendan O'ConnorGeoffrey RyanS DichiaraA KumarN ItoR GuptaR T WollaegerJ P NorrisN KawaiN R ButlerA AryanK MisraR HosokawaK L MurataM NiwanoS B PandeyA KutyrevH J van EertenE A ChaseY-D HuM D Caballero-GarciaAlberto J Castro-TiradoPublished in: Nature (2022)
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are flashes of high-energy radiation arising from energetic cosmic explosions. Bursts of long (greater than two seconds) duration are produced by the core-collapse of massive stars 1 , and those of short (less than two seconds) duration by the merger of compact objects, such as two neutron stars 2 . A third class of events with hybrid high-energy properties was identified 3 , but never conclusively linked to a stellar progenitor. The lack of bright supernovae rules out typical core-collapse explosions 4-6 , but their distance scales prevent sensitive searches for direct signatures of a progenitor system. Only tentative evidence for a kilonova has been presented 7,8 . Here we report observations of the exceptionally bright GRB 211211A, which classify it as a hybrid event and constrain its distance scale to only 346 megaparsecs. Our measurements indicate that its lower-energy (from ultraviolet to near-infrared) counterpart is powered by a luminous (approximately 10 42 erg per second) kilonova possibly formed in the ejecta of a compact object merger.