The Environments of Short-Duration Gamma-Ray Bursts and Implications for their Progenitors
E. Berger (Harvard)

TL;DR
This paper reviews the environments of short-duration gamma-ray bursts, highlighting their diverse host galaxies, large offsets from galaxy centers, and implications for their progenitors, mainly supporting neutron star mergers as a primary source.
Contribution
It synthesizes recent observational data on short GRB environments to infer properties of their progenitors, emphasizing the role of neutron star mergers and host galaxy characteristics.
Findings
Short GRBs occur in both elliptical and star-forming galaxies.
Majority of short GRBs are found in star-forming galaxies.
Offsets of short GRBs from galaxy centers are larger than for long GRBs.
Abstract
[Abridged] The study of short-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) experienced a complete revolution in recent years thanks to the discovery of the first afterglows and host galaxies in May 2005. These observations demonstrated that short GRBs are cosmological in origin, reside in both star forming and elliptical galaxies, are not associated with supernovae, and span a wide isotropic-equivalent energy range of ~10^48-10^52 erg. However, a fundamental question remains unanswered: What are the progenitors of short GRBs? The most popular theoretical model invokes the coalescence of compact object binaries with neutron star and/or black hole constituents. However, additional possibilities exist, including magnetars formed through prompt channels (massive star core-collapse) and delayed channels (binary white dwarf mergers, white dwarf accretion-induced collapse), or accretion-induced collapse…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
