Constraining the mass of the GRB 030329 progenitor
G. Ostlin, E. Zackrisson, J. Sollerman, S. Mattila, M. Hayes

TL;DR
This study uses detailed HST imaging and spectral models to constrain the age and mass of the star that produced GRB 030329, finding it was a very massive star likely over 25 solar masses, supporting the collapsar model.
Contribution
It provides a novel, spatially resolved analysis of the stellar population at the GRB site, offering tighter constraints on progenitor mass than previous unresolved host galaxy studies.
Findings
Progenitor star likely over 25 solar masses.
Progenitor age estimated at less than 8 million years.
Supports the collapsar scenario for GRB progenitors.
Abstract
The long-duration gamma-ray burst (GRB) 030329, associated with supernova (SN) 2003dh, occurred inside a star-forming dwarf galaxy at redshift . The low redshift, and a rich set of archival Hubble Space Telescope (HST) images, makes this GRB well-suited for a detailed study of the stellar population in the immediate vicinity of the explosion. Since the lifetime of a star is directly tied to its mass, the age of the stellar population can be used to put constraints on the GRB and SN progenitor mass. From the HST images we extract the colours of the precise site from which the GRB originated, and find that the colours are significantly different from those of the overall host galaxy and the surrounding starburst environment. We have used spectral evolutionary models, including nebular emission, to carefully constrain the age of the stellar population, and hence the progenitor,…
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