Optical and near-infrared follow-up observations of four Fermi/LAT GRBs : Redshifts, afterglows, energetics and host galaxies
S. McBreen, T. Kr\"uhler, A. Rau, J. Greiner, D. A. Kann, S. Savaglio,, P. Afonso, C. Clemens, R. Filgas, S. Klose, A. K\"up\"uc Yoldas, F. Olivares, E., A. Rossi, G. P. Szokoly, A. Updike, A. Yoldas

TL;DR
This study presents multi-wavelength follow-up observations of four Fermi/LAT-detected gamma-ray bursts, determining redshifts, host galaxy properties, and afterglow characteristics to compare with pre-Fermi GRB populations.
Contribution
It provides detailed optical/near-infrared observations and redshift measurements for four Fermi-detected GRBs, including host galaxy analysis and afterglow decay properties, expanding understanding of high-energy GRB counterparts.
Findings
Redshifts for GRB090328 and GRB090510 were measured as 0.7354 and 0.903.
Host galaxies exhibit star-formation rates of 4.8 and 0.60 solar masses per year.
Afterglow decay indices range from less than 1 to 2.3.
Abstract
Fermi can measure the spectral properties of gamma-ray bursts over a very large energy range and is opening a new window on the prompt emission of these energetic events. Localizations by the instruments on Fermi in combination with follow-up by Swift provide accurate positions for observations at longer wavelengths leading to the determination of redshifts, the true energy budget, host galaxy properties and facilitate comparison with pre-Fermi bursts. Multi-wavelength follow-up observations were performed on the afterglows of four bursts with high energy emission detected by Fermi/LAT : GRB090323, GRB090328, GRB090510 and GRB090902B. They were obtained in the optical/near-infrared bands with GROND mounted at the MPG/ESO 2.2m telescope and additionally of GRB090323 in the optical with the 2 m telescope in Tautenburg, Germany. Three of the events are classified as long bursts while…
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