A nearby long gamma-ray burst from a merger of compact objects
E. Troja(University of Rome Tor Vergata), A. J. Castro‐Tirado(Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas), J. P. Norris(Boise State University), Hendrik van Eerten(University of Bath), Chris L. Fryer(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Masafumi Niwano(Tokyo Institute of Technology), R. Hosokawa(Tokyo Institute of Technology), A. Kutyrev(Goddard Space Flight Center), N. Kawai(Tokyo Institute of Technology), Brendan O’Connor(Goddard Space Flight Center), Y. D. Hu(Brera Astronomical Observatory), E. A. Chase(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Amit Kumar(The Open University), Rahul Gupta(Aryabhatta Research Institute of Observational Sciences), N. Ito(Tokyo Institute of Technology), Kuntal Misra(Space Telescope Science Institute), Katsuhiro L. Murata(Tokyo Institute of Technology), Geoffrey Ryan(Perimeter Institute), S. Dichiara(Pennsylvania State University), Amar Aryan(Aryabhatta Research Institute of Observational Sciences), M. D. Caballero‐García(Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía), Ryan Wollaeger(Los Alamos National Laboratory), S. B. Pandey(Aryabhatta Research Institute of Observational Sciences), N. Butler(University of California, Berkeley)
Cited by 269
Related Papers
How Massive Single Stars End Their Life
|The Astrophysical Journal|2003|2.2k
SymPy: symbolic computing in Python
|PeerJ Computer Science|2017|1.6k
Spectroscopic identification of r-process nucleosynthesis in a double neutron-star merger
|Nature|2017|981
A γ-ray burst at a redshift of z ≈ 8.2
|Nature|2009|639