The optical afterglows and host galaxies of three short/hard gamma-ray bursts
P. D'Avanzo, D. Malesani, S. Covino, S. Piranomonte, A. Grazian, D., Fugazza, R. Margutti, V. D'Elia, L. A. Antonelli, S. Campana, G. Chincarini,, M. Della Valle, F. Fiore, P. Goldoni, J. Mao, R. Perna, R. Salvaterra, L., Stella, G. Stratta, G. Tagliaferri

TL;DR
This study presents optical afterglow and host galaxy observations of three short/hard gamma-ray bursts, providing insights into their origins, host environments, and emission mechanisms, supporting the merger model hypothesis.
Contribution
It offers the first firm identification of host galaxies and optical afterglows for these short GRBs, with detailed analysis of their properties and implications for progenitor models.
Findings
Optical afterglows were detected and host galaxies identified for all three GRBs.
Optical decay rates differ significantly from X-ray decay, indicating different emission mechanisms.
Host galaxies are blue, star-forming, with solar-like metallicities, located at moderate redshifts.
Abstract
Short GRBs are commonly thought to originate from the merging of double compact object binaries but direct evidence for this scenario is still missing. Optical observations of short GRBs allow us to measure redshifts, firmly identify host galaxies, characterize their properties, and accurately localize GRBs within them. Multiwavelength observations of GRB afterglows provide useful information on the emission mechanisms at work. These are all key issues that allow one to discriminate among different models of these elusive events. We carried out photometric observations of the short/hard GRB 051227, GRB 061006, and GRB 071227 with the ESO-VLT starting from several hours after the explosion down to the host galaxy level several days later. For GRB 061006 and GRB 071227 we also obtained spectroscopic observations of the host galaxy. We compared the results obtained from our optical…
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