A Short GRB "No-Host'' Problem? Investigating Large Progenitor Offsets for Short GRBs with Optical Afterglows
E. Berger (Harvard)

TL;DR
This study examines the environments and offsets of short GRBs with optical afterglows and no bright host galaxies, suggesting they may occur at large distances from their hosts or at higher redshifts, affecting their observed brightness.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the large-scale environments and potential progenitor offsets of short GRBs with no host galaxies, combining optical observations and redshift measurements.
Findings
Short GRBs with no hosts tend to have fainter afterglows.
Offsets from host galaxies are typically 15-75 kpc.
Possible high redshift or large progenitor offsets explain faintness.
Abstract
[abridged] We investigate the afterglow properties and large-scale environments of several short-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) with sub-arcsecond optical afterglow positions but no bright coincident host galaxies. The purpose of this joint study is to robustly assess the possibility of significant offsets, a hallmark of the compact object binary merger model. Five such events exist in the current sample of 20 short bursts with optical afterglows, and we find that their optical, X-ray, and gamma-ray emission are systematically fainter. These differences may be due to lower circumburst densities (by about an order of magnitude), to higher redshifts (by dz~0.5-1), or to lower energies, although in the standard GRB model the smaller gamma-ray fluences cannot be explained by lower densities. To study the large-scale environments we use deep optical observations to place limits on…
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