The Dust Extinction Curves of Gamma-Ray Burst Host Galaxies
P.Schady, T.Dwelly, M.J.Page, T.Kr\"uhler, J.Greiner, S.R.Oates, M.De, Pasquale, M.Nardini, P.W.A.Roming, A.Rossi, M.Still

TL;DR
This study investigates the dust extinction properties in 17 GRB host galaxies, revealing an average extinction curve similar to the LMC with little evidence of the Milky Way's 2175Angs feature, and suggests a possible link between dust amount and extinction characteristics.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of dust extinction curves in low-extinction GRB hosts across a broad redshift range, highlighting differences from Milky Way dust properties.
Findings
Average extinction curve similar to LMC with UV slope
Little evidence of the 2175Angs dust feature in low-extinction hosts
Potential correlation between dust amount and extinction curve shape
Abstract
The composition and amount of interstellar dust within gamma-ray burst (GRB) host galaxies is of key importance when addressing selection effects in the GRB redshift distribution, and when studying the properties of their host galaxies. As well as the implications for GRB research, probing the dust within the high-z hosts of GRBs also contributes to our understanding of the conditions of the interstellar medium and star-formation in the distant Universe. Nevertheless, the physical properties of dust within GRB host galaxies continues to be a highly contended issue. In this paper we explore the mean extinction properties of dust within the host galaxies of a sample of 17 GRBs with total host galaxy visual extinction Av<1 (<Av>=0.4), covering a redshift range z=0.7-3.1. We find the average host extinction curve to have an ultraviolet slope comparable to that of the LMC, but with little…
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