The properties of the 2175AA extinction feature discovered in GRB afterglows
Tayyaba Zafar (1,2), Darach Watson (1), Ardis Eliasdottir (1), Johan, P. U. Fynbo (1), Thomas Kruhler (1,3), Patricia Schady (3), Giorgos Leloudas, (1), Pall Jakobsson (4), Christina C. Thone (5), Daniel A. Perley (6), Adam, N. Morgan (6), Joshua Bloom (6)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the properties of the 2175 Å extinction feature in GRB afterglows, revealing unique extinction curves and suggesting complex dust compositions, expanding understanding of dust in distant galaxies.
Contribution
It provides detailed analysis of two new GRB afterglows with the 2175 bump and compares these with other GRB and Local Group sightlines, highlighting dust diversity.
Findings
The 2175 bump is detected in two additional GRB afterglows.
GRB 080605 shows an unusually steep far-UV rise in its extinction curve.
The bump strength in GRB afterglows is generally weaker than in Local Group sightlines.
Abstract
The unequivocal, spectroscopic detection of the 2175 bump in extinction curves outside the Local Group is rare. To date, the properties of the bump have been examined in only two GRB afterglows (GRB 070802 and GRB 080607). In this work we analyse in detail the detections of the 2175 extinction bump in the optical spectra of the two further GRB afterglows: GRB 080605 and 080805. We gather all available optical/NIR photometric, spectroscopic and X-ray data to construct multi-epoch SEDs for both GRB afterglows. We fit the SEDs with the Fitzpatrick & Massa (1990) model with a single or broken PL. We also fit a sample of 38 GRB afterglows, known to prefer a SMC-type extinction curve, with the same model. We find that the SEDs of GRB 080605 and GRB 080805 at two epochs are fit well with a single PL with a derived extinction of A_V = 0.52(+0.13 -0.16) and 0.50 (+0.13 -0.10), and 2.1(+0.7-0.6)…
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