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Canonical Timescales In GRBs–1995

2008 
Understanding the bimodal duration distribution (dynamic range >104) of γ-ray bursts is central to determining if the phenomenon is in fact a singular one. A unifying concept, beyond isotropy and inhomogeneity of the two groups separately, is that bursts consist of pulses, organized in time and energy: wider pulses are more asymmetric, their centroids are shifted to later times at lower energies, and shorter, more symmetric pulses tend to be spectrally harder. Long bursts tend to have many pulses while short bursts usually have few, relatively narrow pulses. Two factors, viewing angle and beaming, may account for pulse asymmetry and the large dynamic range (∼200) in pulse widths. A cosmological time-dilation signature, with an expected dynamic range of order two, would be difficult to measure against these large intrinsic variations and low signal-to-noise levels of dimmer bursts. Some statistics (T90, pulse intervals) are particularly sensitive to brightness bias, noise, and apparently minor variations i...
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