The Afterglow and ULIRG Host Galaxy of the Dark Short GRB 120804A
E. Berger, B. A. Zauderer, A. Levan, R. Margutti, T. Laskar, W. Fong,, V. Mangano, D. B. Fox, R. L. Tunnicliffe, R. Chornock, N. R. Tanvir, K. M., Menten, J. Hjorth, K. Roth, T. J. Dupuy

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed analysis of the afterglow and host galaxy of short GRB 120804A, revealing it occurred in a ULIRG with high star formation, extinction, and specific environmental properties.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed multi-wavelength characterization of a short GRB host as a ULIRG, linking short GRBs to both stellar mass and star formation activity.
Findings
The host galaxy is a ULIRG with SFR ~300 Msun/yr.
The GRB occurred in a highly extincted, dusty environment.
Radio observations suggest emission from the host galaxy, not the afterglow.
Abstract
We present the optical discovery and sub-arcsecond optical and X-ray localization of the afterglow of the short GRB 120804A, as well as optical, near-IR, and radio detections of its host galaxy. X-ray observations with Swift/XRT, Chandra, and XMM-Newton to ~19 d reveal a single power law decline. The optical afterglow is faint, and comparison to the X-ray flux indicates that GRB 120804A is "dark", with a rest-frame extinction of A_V~2.5 mag (at z~1.3). The intrinsic neutral hydrogen column density inferred from the X-ray spectrum, N_H~2x10^22 cm^-2, is commensurate with the large extinction. The host galaxy exhibits red optical/near-IR colors. Equally important, JVLA observations at 0.9-11 d reveal a constant 5.8 GHz flux density and an optically-thin spectrum, unprecedented for GRB afterglows, but suggestive instead of emission from the host galaxy. The optical/near-IR and radio fluxes…
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