The dark GRB080207 in an extremely red host and the implications for GRBs in highly obscured environments
K.M. Svensson, N.R. Tanvir, D.A. Perley, M.J. Michalowski, K.L. Page,, J.S. Bloom, S.B. Cenko, J. Hjorth, P. Jakobsson, D. Watson, P.J. Wheatley

TL;DR
This study investigates the properties of the dark GRB 080207 and its extremely red, dusty host galaxy, revealing insights into GRB environments in obscured, high-redshift, ultra-luminous infrared galaxies and their relation to metallicity and host mass.
Contribution
It provides detailed multi-wavelength observations of a dark GRB host, demonstrating that such hosts are often massive, dusty ULIRGs, and highlights biases in previous GRB host studies.
Findings
GRB 080207 is associated with an extremely red, dusty ULIRG host.
Dark GRB hosts tend to be more massive than optically bright GRB hosts.
Many GRB hosts at z>2 have lower metallicity than sub-mm galaxy populations.
Abstract
[Abridged] We present comprehensive X-ray, optical, near- and mid-infrared, and sub-mm observations of GRB 080207 and its host galaxy. The afterglow was undetected in the optical and near-IR, implying an optical to X-ray index <0.3, identifying GRB 080207 as a dark burst. Swift X-ray observations show extreme absorption in the host, which is confirmed by the unusually large optical extinction found by modelling the X-ray to nIR afterglow spectral energy distribution. Our Chandra observations obtained 8 days post-burst allow us to place the afterglow on the sky to sub-arcsec accuracy, enabling us to pinpoint an extremely red galaxy (ERO). Follow-up host observations with HST, Spitzer, Gemini, Keck and the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) provide a photometric redshift solution of z ~1.74 (+0.05,-0.06) (1 sigma), 1.56 < z < 2.08 at 2 sigma) for the ERO host, and suggest that it is a…
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