Probing the Nature of High-z Short GRB 090426 with Its Early Optical and X-ray Afterglows
Liping Xin, Enwei Liang, Jianyan Wei, Bing Zhang, Houjun Lv, Weikang, Zheng, Yuji Urata, Myungshin Im, Jing Wang, Yulei Qiu, Jinsong Deng, Kuiyun, Huang, Jingyao Hu, Yiseul Jeon, Huali Li, Xuhui Han

TL;DR
This study analyzes the early optical and X-ray afterglows of short GRB 090426, revealing features similar to long GRBs and suggesting a massive star progenitor despite its short duration.
Contribution
It provides detailed early afterglow observations and interprets the data to support a massive star origin for this short GRB, challenging traditional classifications.
Findings
Optical afterglow shows two energy injection episodes.
X-ray and optical emissions are consistent with a common spectral regime.
The cooling frequency is below optical from early times, indicating a similar environment to long GRBs.
Abstract
GRB 090426 is a short duration burst detected by Swift ( s in the observer frame, and s in the burst frame at ). Its host galaxy properties and some -ray related correlations are analogous to those seen in long duration GRBs, which are believed to be of a massive-star origin (so-called Type II GRBs). We present the results of its early optical observations with the 0.8-m TNT telescope at Xinglong observatory, and the 1-m LOAO telescope at Mt. Lemmon Optical Astronomy Observatory in Arizona. Our well-sampled optical afterglow lightcurve covers from seconds to seconds post the GRB trigger. It shows two shallow decay episodes that are likely due to energy injection, which end at seconds and seconds, respectively. The decay slopes post the injection phases are consistent with each other…
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