A multiwavelength study of Swift GRB 060111B constraining the origin of its prompt optical emission
G. Stratta, A. Pozanenko, J-L. Atteia, A. Klotz, S. Basa, B. Gendre,, F. Verrecchia, M. Bo\"er, S. Cutini, M. Henze, S. Holland, M. Ibrahimov, F., Ienna, I. Khamitov, S. Klose, V. Rumyantsev, V. Biryukov, D. Sharapov, F., Vachier, S. Arnouts, D.A. Perley

TL;DR
This study analyzes multi-wavelength data of GRB 060111B, revealing that its prompt optical emission likely originates from reverse shock processes, with implications for understanding GRB emission mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed multi-wavelength analysis of GRB 060111B, supporting the reverse shock origin of prompt optical emission and estimating the fireball's initial Lorentz factor.
Findings
Optical emission likely from reverse shock in a thick shell
Optical and gamma-ray components have separate origins
Estimated Lorentz factor >260-360 at redshift 1-2
Abstract
In this work, we present the results obtained from a multi-wavelength campaign, as well as from the public Swift/BAT, XRT, and UVOT data of GRB 060111B for which a bright optical emission was measured with good temporal resolution during the prompt phase. We identified the host galaxy at R~25 mag; its featureless spectral continuum and brightness, as well as the non-detection of any associated supernova 16 days after the trigger and other independent redshift estimates, converge to z~1-2. From the analysis of the early afterglow SED, we find that non-negligible host galaxy dust extinction, in addition to the Galactic one, affects the observed flux in the optical regime. The extinction-corrected optical-to-gamma-ray spectral energy distribution during the prompt emission shows a flux density ratio =0.01-0.0001 with spectral index ,…
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