The Galaxy Population Hosting Gamma-Ray Bursts
S. Savaglio (MPE), K. Glazebrook (Swinburne University), D. Le Borgne, (CEA/Saclay)

TL;DR
This study analyzes 46 gamma-ray burst host galaxies across a broad redshift range, revealing their typical properties and confirming their association with star-forming, low-mass galaxies, thus establishing GRBs as effective tracers of star formation in the universe.
Contribution
It provides the most extensive characterization of GRB host galaxies, including new relations for star formation rate estimation and insights into their typical stellar masses, metallicities, and dust properties.
Findings
Most hosts are at z<1.6 with median z=0.96.
Average stellar mass is 10^9.3 M_sun.
Star formation rates range from 0.01 to 36 M_sun/yr.
Abstract
We present the most extensive and complete study of the properties for the largest sample (46 objects) of gamma-ray burst (GRB) host galaxies. The redshift interval and the mean redshift of the sample are 0<z<6.3 and z=0.96 (look-back time: 7.2 Gyr), respectively; 89% of the hosts are at z <~ 1.6. Optical-near-infrared (NIR) photometry and spectroscopy are used to derive stellar masses, star formation rates (SFRs), dust extinctions and metallicities. The average stellar mass is 10^9.3 M_sun, with a 1 sigma dispersion of 0.8 dex. The average metallicity for a subsample of 17 hosts is about 1/6 solar and the dust extinction in the visual band (for a subsample of 10 hosts) is A_V=0.5. We obtain new relations to derive SFR from [OII] or UV fluxes, when Balmer emission lines are not available. SFRs, corrected for dust extinction, aperture-slit loss and stellar Balmer absorption are in the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
