The metallicity of gamma-ray burst environments from high energy observations
D. Watson (1), P. Laursen (2) ((1) DARK, U. Copenhagen, (2) Oskar, Klein Centre, U. Stockholm)

TL;DR
This study uses high-energy observations of gamma-ray bursts to estimate the metallicity of their environments by analyzing X-ray absorption and Compton scattering effects, providing new limits on the gas column density and metallicity.
Contribution
It introduces a method to constrain the gas column density and metallicity in GRB environments using high-energy spectral data and scattering simulations, which was not previously possible.
Findings
Limits on gas column density are typically <~1e25 cm^{-2} for less luminous bursts.
In some cases, metallicity lower limits of 0 to 0.01 Z/Zsun are derived.
Potential to distinguish primordial from non-primordial GRBs at high redshift.
Abstract
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) and their early afterglows ionise their circumburst material. Only high-energy spectroscopy therefore, allows examination of the matter close to the burst itself. Soft X-ray absorption allows an estimate to be made of the total column density in metals. The detection of the X-ray afterglow can also be used to place a limit on the total gas column along the line of sight based on the Compton scattering opacity. Such a limit would enable, for the first time, the determination of lower limits on the metallicity in the circumburst environments of GRBs. In this paper, we determine the limits that can be placed on the total gas column density in the vicinities of GRBs based on the Compton scattering. We simulate the effects of Compton scattering on a collimated beam of high energy photons passing through a shell of high column density material to determine the expected…
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