Helium in natal HII regions: the origin of the X-ray absorption in gamma-ray burst afterglows
Darach Watson (1), Tayyaba Zafar (2), Anja C. Andersen (1), Johan P., U. Fynbo (1), Javier Gorosabel (3), Jens Hjorth (1), P\'all Jakobsson (4),, Thomas Kr\"uhler (1), Peter Laursen (1), Giorgos Leloudas (1,5), Daniele, Malesani (1) ((1) DARK, U. Copenhagen, (2) LAM-CNRS

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that helium in the host HII regions of gamma-ray bursts is the primary cause of excess soft X-ray absorption, clarifying its origin and its correlation with host galaxy properties.
Contribution
It identifies helium in GRB host HII regions as the main source of X-ray absorption, resolving a decade-long mystery and refining the understanding of GRB afterglow spectra.
Findings
Helium in host HII regions causes most X-ray absorption.
X-ray absorption correlates with neutral gas and optical extinction.
Absorption is not due to intergalactic medium or intervening absorbers.
Abstract
Soft X-ray absorption in excess of Galactic is observed in the afterglows of most gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), but the correct solution to its origin has not been arrived at after more than a decade of work, preventing its use as a powerful diagnostic tool. We resolve this long-standing problem and find that He in the GRB's host HII region is responsible for most of the absorption. We show that the X-ray absorbing column density (N_Hx) is correlated with both the neutral gas column density and with the optical afterglow extinction (Av). This correlation explains the connection between dark bursts and bursts with high N_Hx values. From these correlations we exclude an origin of the X-ray absorption which is not related to the host galaxy, i.e. the intergalactic medium or intervening absorbers are not responsible. We find that the correlation with the dust column has a strong redshift…
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