Limits on Radioactive-Powered Emission Associated With a Short-Hard GRB 070724A in a Star-Forming Galaxy
Daniel Kocevski, Christina C Thone, Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz, Joshua S., Bloom, Jonathan Granot, Nathaniel R. Butler, Daniel A. Perley, Maryam Modjaz,, William H. Lee, Bethany E. Cobb, Andrew J. Levan, Nial Tanvir, Stefano Covino

TL;DR
This study conducted deep, multi-band radio observations of short-hard GRB 070724A to search for radioactive-powered emission, but found no evidence, placing new limits on possible radioactive nuclides and ruling out a supernova similar to long GRBs.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive limits on radioactive emission from a short-hard GRB and compares these constraints with supernova models, enhancing understanding of their progenitors.
Findings
No detectable radioactive-powered emission was observed.
Limits are fainter than any previously detected broad-lined Type Ic supernova.
The host galaxy is a moderately star-forming galaxy with high metallicity.
Abstract
We present results of an extensive observing campaign of the short duration, hard spectrum gamma-ray burst (GRB) 070724A, aimed at detecting the radioactively-powered emission that might follow from a binary merger or collapse involving compact objects. Our multi-band observations span the range in time over which this so-called Li-Paczynski mini-supernova could be active, beginning within 3 hours of the GRB trigger, and represent some of the deepest and most comprehensive searches for such emission. We find no evidence for such activity and place limits on the abundances and the lifetimes of the possible radioactive nuclides that could form in the rapid decompression of nuclear-density matter. Furthermore, our limits are significantly fainter than the peak magnitude of any previously detected broad-lined Type Ic supernova (SN) associated with other GRBs, effectively ruling out a long…
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