A new analysis of the short-duration, hard-spectrum GRB 051103, a possible extragalactic SGR giant flare
K. Hurley, A. Rowlinson, E. Bellm, D. Perley, I. G. Mitrofanov, D. V., Golovin, A. S. Kozyrev, M. L. Litvak, A. B. Sanin, W. Boynton, C. Fellows, K., Harshmann, M. Ohno, K. Yamaoka, Y. E. Nakagawa, D. M. Smith, T. Cline, N.R., Tanvir, P.T. O'Brien, K. Wiersema, E. Rol, A. Levan

TL;DR
This study refines the localization and analyzes the properties of GRB 051103, a candidate extragalactic SGR giant flare, but finds no definitive evidence confirming its origin, highlighting the challenges in identifying such events.
Contribution
The paper provides improved localization, spectral analysis, and deep optical observations of GRB 051103, offering new constraints on its potential SGR giant flare origin.
Findings
Refined localization reduces error box size by over a factor of two.
No periodic component detected in the burst's time history.
No convincing afterglow or supernova remnant identified within the error region.
Abstract
GRB 051103 is considered to be a candidate soft gamma repeater (SGR) extragalactic giant magnetar flare by virtue of its proximity on the sky to M81/M82, as well as its time history, localization, and energy spectrum. We have derived a refined interplanetary network localization for this burst which reduces the size of the error box by over a factor of two. We examine its time history for evidence of a periodic component, which would be one signature of an SGR giant flare, and conclude that this component is neither detected nor detectable under reasonable assumptions. We analyze the time-resolved energy spectra of this event with improved time- and energy resolution, and conclude that although the spectrum is very hard, its temporal evolution at late times cannot be determined, which further complicates the giant flare association. We also present new optical observations reaching…
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