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. 2005 Apr 28;434(7037):1107-9.
doi: 10.1038/nature03525.

A giant gamma-ray flare from the magnetar SGR 1806-20

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A giant gamma-ray flare from the magnetar SGR 1806-20

D M Palmer et al. Nature. .

Abstract

Two classes of rotating neutron stars-soft gamma-ray repeaters (SGRs) and anomalous X-ray pulsars-are magnetars, whose X-ray emission is powered by a very strong magnetic field (B approximately 10(15) G). SGRs occasionally become 'active', producing many short X-ray bursts. Extremely rarely, an SGR emits a giant flare with a total energy about a thousand times higher than in a typical burst. Here we report that SGR 1806-20 emitted a giant flare on 27 December 2004. The total (isotropic) flare energy is 2 x 10(46) erg, which is about a hundred times higher than the other two previously observed giant flares. The energy release probably occurred during a catastrophic reconfiguration of the neutron star's magnetic field. If the event had occurred at a larger distance, but within 40 megaparsecs, it would have resembled a short, hard gamma-ray burst, suggesting that flares from extragalactic SGRs may form a subclass of such bursts.

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Comment in

  • Astrophysics: a certain flare.
    Lazzati D. Lazzati D. Nature. 2005 Apr 28;434(7037):1075-6. doi: 10.1038/4341075a. Nature. 2005. PMID: 15858554 No abstract available.

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