14–24 Jul 2025
CICG - International Conference Centre - Geneva, Switzerland
Europe/Zurich timezone
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The very high energy view of gamma-ray bursts with the MAGIC telescopes

21 Jul 2025, 13:35
15m
CICG - International Conference Centre - Geneva, Switzerland

CICG - International Conference Centre - Geneva, Switzerland

17 rue de Varembé CH - 1211 Geneva Switzerland
Talk Gamma-Ray Astrophysics GA

Speaker

Alessio Berti (Max Planck Institute for Physics)

Description

Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are one of the main targets for the observations of the MAGIC telescopes. As a result of the effort in improving the sensitivity of the instrument and the automatic follow-up strategy, MAGIC detected two GRBs in the very-high-energy (VHE, E>100 GeV) range, namely GRB 190114C and GRB 201216C. In GRB 190114C ($z=0.42$), the data collected by MAGIC revealed a new emission component at sub-TeV energies in the afterglow of the GRB. The very rich multi-wavelength dataset, spanning 17 orders of magnitude in energy, allowed to perform a detailed modelling of the broadband emission. The multi-wavelength data could be modelled within a one-zone synchrotron-self Compton scenario with internal g-g absorption, where the model parameters are compatible with those found in previous GRB afterglow studies below GeV energies. Similarly, GRB 201216C broadband emission could be explained using the same model, although the amount of simultaneous multi-wavelength data is reduced with respect to GRB 190114C. In particular, GRB 201216C challenged the current MAGIC detection potential, as its redshift was determined to be $z=1.1$, strongly reducing the observed gamma-ray flux but making it the most distant source detected at VHE. These two detections, accompanied by evidence of VHE emission from a few more GRBs, opened up new questions such as the presence of sub-TeV emission in different classes and phases of GRBs. In this contribution we will present the status of the MAGIC GRB follow-up program, with an highlight on its detected GRBs. Moreover we will show the results on the GRBs observed by MAGIC from 2013 to 2019 with no evidence of VHE emission, in particular for those with simultaneous X-ray observations and redshift $z<2$. We will discuss the implications of these results for GRB physics and the challenges and prospects for future GRB observations with MAGIC.

Collaboration(s) MAGIC Collaboration

Author

Alessio Berti (Max Planck Institute for Physics)

Co-authors

Alberto Castro-Tirado Andrea Melandri Antonio Stamerra (INAF-OAR) Carole Mundell David Paneque (Max Planck Institute for Physics, Munich) Davide Miceli (University & INFN Padova, Italy) Elena Moretti (IFAE) Francesco Longo (Univ. + INFN) Iain Steele Dr Ievgen Vovk (Institute for Cosmic Ray Research, The University of Tokyo) Katsuaki Asano (Institute for Cosmic Ray Research, the University of Tokyo) Kenta Terauchi (Kyoto University) Dr Koji Noda (Chiba University) Dr Lara Nava (INAF) Manisha Shrestha Michele Palatiello (INAF-OAR) Nuria Jordana-Mitjans Razmik Mirzoyan (Max-Planck-Institute for Physics) Satoshi Fukami (DESY) Serena Loporchio (Universita e INFN, Bari (IT)) Stefano Covino (INAF / Brera) Susumu Inoue (Institute for Cosmic Ray Research, University of Tokyo) Yusuke Suda (Hiroshima University) Željka Bošnjak (FER - University of Zagreb)

Presentation materials

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