Clustering of galaxies around GRB sight-lines
Vladimir Sudilovsky, Jochen Greiner, Arne Rau, Mara Salvato, Sandra, Savaglio, Susanna D. Vergani, P. Schady, Jonny Elliott, T. Kruehler, D. A., Kann, Sylvio Klose, Andrea Rossi, Robert Filgas, Sebastian Schmidl

TL;DR
This study investigates whether there is an overdensity of galaxies around GRB sight-lines, finding no significant clustering despite previous evidence of MgII absorber excess, suggesting the need for deeper surveys.
Contribution
The paper provides the first large-scale analysis of galaxy clustering around GRB sight-lines using the two-point angular correlation function, challenging previous MgII absorber findings.
Findings
No significant galaxy clustering detected around GRB sight-lines.
Results contradict expectations from MgII absorber excess.
Deeper observations could reveal fainter galaxy counterparts.
Abstract
There is evidence of an overdensity of strong intervening MgII absorption line systems distributed along the lines of sight towards GRB afterglows relative to quasar sight-lines. If this excess is real, one should also expect an overdensity of field galaxies around GRB sight-lines, as strong MgII tends to trace these sources. In this work, we test this expectation by calculating the two point angular correlation function of galaxies within 120 ( at ) of GRB afterglows. We compare the Gamma-ray burst Optical and Near-infrared Detector (GROND) GRB afterglow sample -- one of the largest and most homogeneous samples of GRB fields -- with galaxies and AGN found in the COSMOS-30 photometric catalog. We find no significant signal of anomalous clustering of galaxies at an estimated median redshift of around…
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