Discovery of the Very Red Near-Infrared and Optical Afterglow of the Short-Duration GRB 070724A
E. Berger (Harvard), S. B. Cenko (UC Berkeley), D. B. Fox (PSU), A., Cucchiara (PSU)

TL;DR
We discovered a very red near-infrared and optical afterglow of short GRB 070724A, revealing insights into its environment, possible dust extinction, and challenging existing models of mini-supernova emission.
Contribution
This paper reports the first detection of a very red near-infrared and optical afterglow for a short GRB, providing new constraints on its environment and emission mechanisms.
Findings
Afterglow detected in near-IR and optical starting 2.3 hours after burst
Optical/near-IR spectral index indicates significant dust extinction or non-afterglow origin
Near-IR afterglow is among the brightest for short GRBs, optical emission is very faint
Abstract
[Abridged] We report the discovery of the near-infrared and optical afterglow of the short-duration gamma-ray burst GRB070724A. The afterglow is detected in i,J,H,K observations starting 2.3 hr after the burst with K=19.59+/-0.16 mag and i=23.79+/-0.07 mag, but is absent in images obtained 1.3 years later. Fading is also detected in the K-band between 2.8 and 3.7 hr at a 4-sigma significance level. The optical/near-IR spectral index, beta_{O,NIR}=-2, is much redder than expected in the standard afterglow model, pointing to either significant dust extinction, A_{V,host}~2 mag, or a non-afterglow origin for the near-IR emission. The case for extinction is supported by a shallow optical to X-ray spectral index, consistent with the definition for ``dark bursts'', and a normal near-IR to X-ray spectral index. Moreover, a comparison to the optical discovery magnitudes of all short GRBs with…
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