Constraining the nature of the most distant Gamma-Ray Burst host galaxies
S. Basa, J. G. Cuby, S. Savaglio, S. Boissier, B. Clement, H. Flores,, D. Le Borgne, A. Mazure

TL;DR
This study deepens our understanding of high-redshift gamma-ray burst host galaxies by conducting the deepest observations yet, revealing their faintness and low star formation rates, and highlighting the challenges in characterizing these distant objects.
Contribution
It provides the deepest photometric and spectroscopic observations of z>5 GRB host galaxies, offering new insights into their properties and evolution, and emphasizing observational challenges.
Findings
High-redshift GRB hosts are faint and often undetected even with deep observations.
These hosts tend to have lower star formation rates at z>5 compared to lower redshifts.
No Ly-alpha emission was detected from the z=6.7 host, indicating possible evolution or different properties.
Abstract
Long duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) allow us to explore the distant Universe, and are potentially the most effective tracer of the most distant objects. Our current knowledge of the properties of GRB host galaxies at redshifts >5 is very scarce. We propose to improve this situation by obtaining more observations of high-redshift hosts to better understand their properties and help enable us to use GRBs as probes of the high-redshift universe. We performed very deep photometric observations of three high-redshift GRB host galaxies, GRB 080913 at z =6.7, GRB 060927 at z =5.5 and GRB 060522 at z =5.1. In addition, we completed deep spectroscopic observations of the GRB080913 host galaxy with X-Shooter at the VLT to search for Ly-alpha emission. For the sake of the discussion, we use published results on another high-redshift GRB host, GRB 050904 at z = 6.3. The sample of GRB host…
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