The dark nature of GRB 051022 and its host galaxy
A. J. Castro-Tirado, M. Bremer, S. McBreen, J. Gorosabel, S. Guziy, R., M. Gonzalez Delgado, G. Bihain, T. Fakthullin, S. B. Pandey, M. Jelinek, A., de Ugarte Postigo, V. Sokolov, K. Misra, R. Sagar, P. Bama, A. P. Kamble, G., C. Anupama, J. Licandro, F. J. Aceituno, R. Neri

TL;DR
This study investigates the heavily obscured host galaxy of the intense dark GRB 051022, revealing a starburst galaxy with significant dust and gas that likely extinguished the optical afterglow.
Contribution
It provides detailed multiwavelength observations of a dark GRB host galaxy, highlighting its high luminosity, star formation rate, and dust properties, which explain the optical darkness.
Findings
Host galaxy is a luminous blue compact galaxy at z=0.809.
Significant X-ray absorption indicates dense gas and dust.
Optical afterglow likely extinguished by dense star-forming region.
Abstract
We present multiwavelength (X-ray/optical/near-infrared/millimetre) observations of GRB 051022 between 2.5 hours and ~1.15 yr after the event. It is the most intense gamma-ray burst (~ 10^-4 erg cm^-2) detected by HETE-2, with the exception of the nearby GRB 030329. Optical and near infrared observations did not detect the afterglow despite a strong afterglow at X-ray wavelengths. Millimetre observations at Plateau de Bure (PdB) detected a source and a flare, confirming the association of this event with a moderately bright (R = 21.5) galaxy. Spectroscopic observations of this galaxy show strong [O II], Hbeta and [O III] emission lines at a redshift of 0.809. The spectral energy distribution of the galaxy implies Av (rest frame) = 1.0 and a starburst occuring ~ 25 Myr ago, during which the star-forming-rate reached >= 25 Msun/yr. In conjunction with the spatial extent (~ 1'') it…
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