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Demographics of the Galaxies Hosting Short-Duration Gamma-Ray Bursts

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2013

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IOP Publishing
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Fong, W., E. Berger, R. Chornock, R. Margutti, A. J. Levan, N. R. Tanvir, R. L. Tunnicliffe, et al. 2013. Demographics of the Galaxies Hosting Short-Duration Gamma-Ray Bursts. The Astrophysical Journal 769, no. 1: 56. doi:10.1088/0004-637x/769/1/56.

Abstract

We present observations of the afterglows and host galaxies of three short-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs): 100625A, 101219A and 110112A. We find that GRB 100625A occurred in a z = 0.452 early-type galaxy with a stellar mass of ≈ 4.6×109 M⊙ and a stellar population age of ≈ 0.7 Gyr, and GRB 101219A originated in a starforming galaxy at z = 0.718 with a stellar mass of ≈ 1.4×109M⊙, a star formation rate of ≈ 16 M⊙ yr−1, and a stellar population age of ≈ 50 Myr. We also report the discovery of the optical afterglow of GRB 110112A, which lacks a coincident host galaxy to i & 26 mag and we cannot conclusively identify any field galaxy as a possible host. From afterglow modeling, the bursts have inferred circumburst densities of ≈ 10−4 − 1 cm−3, and isotropic-equivalent gamma-ray and kinetic energies of ≈ 1050 − 1051 erg. These three events highlight the diversity of galactic environments that host short GRBs. To quantify this diversity, we use the sample of 36 Swift short GRBs with robust associations to an environment (∼ 1/2 of 68 short bursts detected by Swift to May 2012) and classify bursts originating from four types of environments: late-type (≈ 50%), early-type (≈ 15%), inconclusive (≈ 20%), and “host-less” (lacking a coincident host galaxy to limits of & 26 mag; ≈ 15%). To find likely ranges for the true late- and early-type fractions, we assign each of the host-less bursts to either the late- or early-type category using probabilistic arguments, and consider the scenario that all hosts in the inconclusive category are early-type galaxies to set an upper bound on the early-type fraction. We calculate most likely ranges for the late- and early-type fractions of ≈ 60 − 80% and ≈ 20 − 40%, respectively. We find no clear trend between gamma-ray duration and host type. We also find no change to the fractions when excluding events recently claimed as possible contaminants from the long GRB/collapsar population. Our reported demographics are consistent with a short GRB rate driven by both stellar mass and star formation.

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gamma rays: bursts

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