Constraining the star formation histories of GRB Host Galaxies from their observed abundance patterns
F. Calura (1), M. Dessauges-Zavadsky (2), J. X. Prochaska (3), F., Matteucci (1); ((1) Dip. Astonomia, Universita' di Trieste, Italy; (2), Observatoire de Geneve, Switzerland; (3) U:CO/Lick Observatory, Santa Cruz,, USA)

TL;DR
This study uses detailed chemical evolution models to analyze elemental abundances in GRB host galaxies, constraining their star formation histories, ages, and dust content, and comparing their properties with other galaxy populations across redshifts.
Contribution
First application of chemical evolution models including dust to constrain star formation histories of GRB host galaxies from observed abundances.
Findings
GRB hosts are low metallicity, star-forming galaxies.
Predicted SSFR decreases with redshift, matching cosmic SFR trends.
Observed GRB hosts show increasing SSFR with decreasing redshift.
Abstract
Long-duration Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) are linked to the collapse of massive stars and their hosts are exclusively identified as active, star forming galaxies. Four long GRBs observed at high spectral resolution at redshift 1.5 <z < 4 allowed the determination of the elemental abundances for a set of different chemical elements. In this paper, for the first time, by means of detailed chemical evolution models taking into account also dust production, we attempt to constrain the star formation history of the host galaxies of these GRBs from the study of the chemical abundances measured in their ISM. We are also able to provide constraints on the age and on the dust content of GRB hosts. Our results support the hypothesis that long duration GRBs occur preferentially in low metallicity, star forming galaxies. We compare the specific star formation rate, namely the star formation rate per…
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