1 research outputs found
An unusual transient following the short GRB 071227
We present X-ray and optical observations of the short duration gamma-ray burst GRB
071227 and its host at z = 0.381, obtained using Swift, Gemini South and the Very
Large Telescope. We identify a short-lived and moderately bright optical transient,
with flux significantly in excess of that expected from a simple extrapolation of the Xray spectrum at 0.2-0.3 days after burst. We fit the SED with afterglow models allowing
for high extinction and thermal emission models that approximate a kilonova to assess
the excess’ origins. While some kilonova contribution is plausible, it is not favoured due
to the low temperature and high luminosity required, implying superluminal expansion
and a large ejecta mass of ∼ 0.1 M . We find, instead, that the transient is broadly
consistent with power-law spectra with additional dust extinction of E(B − V) ∼ 0.4
mag, although a possibly thermal excess remains in the z -band. We investigate the
host, a spiral galaxy with an edge-on orientation, resolving its spectrum along its
major axis to construct the galaxy rotation curve and analyse the star formation and
chemical properties. The integrated host emission shows evidence for high extinction,
consistent with the afterglow findings. The metallicity and extinction are consistent
with previous studies of this host and indicate the galaxy is a typical, but dusty,
late-type SGRB host