A High Signal-to-Noise Ratio Composite Spectrum of Gamma-ray Burst Afterglows
L. Christensen, J. P. U. Fynbo, J. X. Prochaska, C. C. Thoene, A. de, Ugarte Postigo, P. Jakobsson

TL;DR
This paper presents a high signal-to-noise composite spectrum of 60 gamma-ray burst afterglows, revealing detailed absorption features and their variations, and compares these with other astrophysical environments.
Contribution
It provides the first high-quality composite spectrum of GRB afterglows across a wide wavelength range, analyzing absorption line properties and their temporal and energetic variations.
Findings
Absorption line strengths are similar regardless of burst energy or optical brightness.
Dark bursts show stronger absorption lines than optically bright bursts.
No evidence of dust or molecular content was found despite strong metal lines.
Abstract
We present a composite spectrum of 60 long duration gamma-ray burst (GRB) afterglows with redshifts in the range 0.35<z<6.7 observed with low resolution optical spectra. The composite spectrum covers the wavelength range 700-6600 A in the rest frame and has a mean signal-to-noise ratio of 150 per 1 A pixel and reaches a maximum of ~300 in the range 2500-3500 A. Equivalent widths are measured from metal absorption lines from the Lya line to ~5200 A, and associated metal and hydrogen lines are identified between the Lyman break and Lya line. The average transmission within the Lyman forest is consistent with that found along quasar lines of sight. We find a temporal variation in fine structure lines when dividing the sample into bursts observed within 2 hours from their trigger and those observed later. Other lines in the predominantly neutral gas show variations too, but this is most…
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