3,427 research outputs found
Taking stock of SLSN and LGRB host galaxy comparison using a complete sample of LGRBs
Long gamma-ray bursts (LGRBs) and superluminous supernovae (SLSNe) are both
explosive transients with very massive progenitor stars. Clues about the nature
of the progenitors can be found by investigating environments in which such
transients occur. While studies of LGRB host galaxies have a long history,
dedicated observational campaigns have only recently resulted in a high enough
number of photometrically and spectroscopically observed SLSN hosts to allow
statistically significant analysis of their properties. In this paper we make a
comparison of the host galaxies of hydrogen-poor (H-poor) SLSNe and the
Swift/BAT6 sample of LGRBs. In contrast to previous studies we use a complete
sample of LGRBs and we address a special attention to the comparison
methodology and the selection of SLSN sample whose data have been compiled from
the available literature. At intermediate redshifts (0.3 < z < 0.7) the two
classes of transients select galaxies whose properties (stellar mass,
luminosity, star-formation rate, specific star-formation rate and metallicity)
do not differ on average significantly. Moreover, the host galaxies of both
classes of objects follow the fundamental metallicity relation and the
fundamental plane of metallicity. In contrast to previous studies we show that
at intermediate redshifts the emission line equivalent widths of the two
populations are essentially the same and that the previous claims regarding the
higher fraction of SLSN hosts among the extreme emission line galaxies with
respect to LGRBs are mostly due to a larger fraction of strong-line emitters
among SLSN hosts at z < 0.3, where samples of LGRB hosts are small and poorly
defined.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, accepted to Astronomy & Astrophysic
A complete sample of bright Swift Long Gamma Ray Bursts: testing the spectral-energy correlations
We use a nearly complete sample of Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) detected by the
Swift satellite to study the correlations between the spectral peak energy Ep
of the prompt emission, the isotropic energetics Eiso and the isotropic
luminosity Liso. This GRB sample is characterized by a high level of
completeness in redshift (90%). This allows us to probe in an unbiased way the
issue related to the physical origin of these correlations against selection
effects. We find that one burst, GRB 061021, is an outlier to the Ep-Eiso
correlation. Despite this case, we find strong Ep-Eiso and Ep-Liso correlations
for the bursts of the complete sample. Their slopes, normalisations and
dispersions are consistent with those found with the whole sample of bursts
with measured redshift and Ep. This means that the biases present in the total
sample commonly used to study these correlations do not affect their
properties. Finally, we also find no evolution with redshift of the Ep-Eiso and
Ep-Liso correlations.Comment: MNRAS in press, 9 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables. This version matches
the published version in MNRA
Optical and X-ray Rest-frame Light Curves of the BAT6 sample
We present the rest-frame light curves in the optical and X-ray bands of an
unbiased and complete sample of Swift long Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs), namely the
BAT6 sample. The unbiased BAT6 sample (consisting of 58 events) has the highest
level of completeness in redshift ( 95%), allowing us to compute the
rest-frame X-ray and optical light curves for 55 and 47 objects, respectively.
We compute the X-ray and optical luminosities accounting for any possible
source of absorption (Galactic and intrinsic) that could affect the observed
fluxes in these two bands. We compare the behaviour observed in the X-ray and
in the optical bands to assess the relative contribution of the emission during
the prompt and afterglow phases. We unarguably demonstrate that the GRBs
rest-frame optical luminosity distribution is not bimodal, being rather
clustered around the mean value Log(L) = 29.9 0.8 when estimated at
a rest frame time of 12 hr. This is in contrast with what found in previous
works and confirms that the GRB population has an intrinsic unimodal luminosity
distribution. For more than 70% of the events the rest-frame light curves in
the X-ray and optical bands have a different evolution, indicating distinct
emitting regions and/or mechanisms. The X-ray light curves normalised to the
GRB isotropic energy (E), provide evidence for X-ray emission still
powered by the prompt emission until late times ( hours after the burst
event). On the other hand, the same test performed for the E-normalised optical light curves shows that the optical emission is a
better proxy of the afterglow emission from early to late times.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A: 10 pages, 5 figures, 2 table
GRB orphan afterglows in present and future radio transient surveys
Orphan Afterglows (OA) are slow transients produced by Gamma Ray Bursts seen
off-axis that become visible on timescales of days/years at optical/NIR and
radio frequencies, when the prompt emission at high energies (X and gamma rays)
has already ceased. Given the typically estimated jet opening angle of GRBs
theta_jet ~ 3 deg, for each burst pointing to the Earth there should be a
factor ~ 700 more GRBs pointing in other directions. Despite this, no secure
OAs have been detected so far. Through a population synthesis code we study the
emission properties of the population of OA at radio frequencies. OAs reach
their emission peak on year-timescales and they last for a comparable amount of
time. The typical peak fluxes (which depend on the observing frequency) are of
few micro Jy in the radio band with only a few OA reaching the mJy level. These
values are consistent with the upper limits on the radio flux of SN Ib/c
observed at late times. We find that the OA radio number count distribution has
a typical slope -1.7 at high fluxes and a flatter (-0.4) slope at low fluxes
with a break at a frequency-dependent flux. Our predictions of the OA rates are
consistent with the (upper) limits of recent radio surveys and archive searches
for radio transients. Future radio surveys like VAST/ASKAP at 1.4 GHz should
detect ~ 3x10^-3 OA deg^-2 yr-1, MeerKAT and EVLA at 8.4 GHz should see ~
3x10^-1 OA deg-2 yr-1. The SKA, reaching the micro Jy flux limit, could see up
to ~ 0.2-1.5 OA deg^-2 yr^-1. These rates also depend on the duration of the OA
above a certain flux limit and we discuss this effect with respect to the
survey cadence.Comment: (10 pages, 5 figures, 1 table) Accepted for publication by PAS
Clustering of galaxies around GRB sight-lines
There is evidence of an overdensity of strong intervening MgII absorption
line systems distributed along the lines of sight towards GRB afterglows
relative to quasar sight-lines. If this excess is real, one should also expect
an overdensity of field galaxies around GRB sight-lines, as strong MgII tends
to trace these sources. In this work, we test this expectation by calculating
the two point angular correlation function of galaxies within
120 ( at ) of GRB afterglows. We compare the Gamma-ray burst Optical and
Near-infrared Detector (GROND) GRB afterglow sample -- one of the largest and
most homogeneous samples of GRB fields -- with galaxies and AGN found in the
COSMOS-30 photometric catalog. We find no significant signal of anomalous
clustering of galaxies at an estimated median redshift of around GRB
sight-lines, down to . This result is contrary to the
expectations from the MgII excess derived from GRB afterglow spectroscopy,
although many confirmed galaxy counterparts to MgII absorbers may be too faint
to detect in our sample -- especially those at . We note that the addition
of higher sensitivity Spitzer IRAC or HST WFC3 data for even a subset of our
sample would increase this survey's depth by several orders of magnitude,
simultaneously increasing statistics and enabling the investigation of a much
larger redshift space.}Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures. A&A accepte
Unveiling the population of orphan Gamma Ray Bursts
Gamma Ray Bursts are detectable in the gamma-ray band if their jets are
oriented towards the observer. However, for each GRB with a typical theta_jet,
there should be ~2/theta_jet^2 bursts whose emission cone is oriented elsewhere
in space. These off-axis bursts can be eventually detected when, due to the
deceleration of their relativistic jets, the beaming angle becomes comparable
to the viewing angle. Orphan Afterglows (OA) should outnumber the current
population of bursts detected in the gamma-ray band even if they have not been
conclusively observed so far at any frequency. We compute the expected flux of
the population of orphan afterglows in the mm, optical and X-ray bands through
a population synthesis code of GRBs and the standard afterglow emission model.
We estimate the detection rate of OA by on-going and forthcoming surveys. The
average duration of OA as transients above a given limiting flux is derived and
described with analytical expressions: in general OA should appear as daily
transients in optical surveys and as monthly/yearly transients in the mm/radio
band. We find that ~ 2 OA yr^-1 could already be detected by Gaia and up to 20
OA yr^-1 could be observed by the ZTF survey. A larger number of 50 OA yr^-1
should be detected by LSST in the optical band. For the X-ray band, ~ 26 OA
yr^-1 could be detected by the eROSITA. For the large population of OA
detectable by LSST, the X-ray and optical follow up of the light curve (for the
brightest cases) and/or the extensive follow up of their emission in the mm and
radio band could be the key to disentangle their GRB nature from other
extragalactic transients of comparable flux density.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication by Astronomy
and Astrophysic
Herschel observations of gamma-ray burst host galaxies: implications for the topology of the dusty interstellar medium
Long-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are indisputably related to star
formation, and their vast luminosity in gamma rays pin-points regions of star
formation independent of galaxy mass. As such, GRBs provide a unique tool for
studying star forming galaxies out to high-z independent of luminosity. Most of
our understanding of the properties of GRB hosts (GRBHs) comes from optical and
near-infrared (NIR) follow-up observations, and we therefore have relatively
little knowledge of the fraction of dust-enshrouded star formation that resides
within GRBHs. Currently ~20% of GRBs show evidence of significant amounts of
dust along the line of sight to the afterglow through the host galaxy, and
these GRBs tend to reside within redder and more massive galaxies than GRBs
with optically bright afterglows. In this paper we present Herschel
observations of five GRBHs with evidence of being dust-rich, targeted to
understand the dust attenuation properties within GRBs better. Despite the
sensitivity of our Herschel observations, only one galaxy in our sample was
detected (GRBH 070306), for which we measure a total star formation rate (SFR)
of ~100Mstar/yr, and which had a relatively high stellar mass
(log[Mstar]=10.34+0.09/-0.04). Nevertheless, when considering a larger sample
of GRBHs observed with Herschel, it is clear that stellar mass is not the only
factor contributing to a Herschel detection, and significant dust extinction
along the GRB sightline (A_{V,GRB}>1.5~mag) appears to be a considerably better
tracer of GRBHs with high dust mass. This suggests that the extinguishing dust
along the GRB line of sight lies predominantly within the host galaxy ISM, and
thus those GRBs with A_{V,GRB}>1~mag but with no host galaxy Herschel
detections are likely to have been predominantly extinguished by dust within an
intervening dense cloud.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
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