X-ray absorption evolution in Gamma-Ray Bursts: intergalactic medium or evolutionary signature of their host galaxies?
R.L.C. Starling, R. Willingale, N.R. Tanvir, A.E. Scott, K. Wiersema,, P.T. O'Brien, A.J. Levan, G.C. Stewart

TL;DR
This study investigates the evolution of X-ray absorption in Gamma-Ray Bursts, considering whether it originates from host galaxies or the intergalactic medium, and finds evidence for both contributions depending on redshift.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the N(H,intrinsic)-z relation using a large sample and models the IGM absorption, highlighting the potential role of the Warm Hot Intergalactic Medium.
Findings
The N(H,intrinsic)-z correlation is likely real and not due to biases.
IGM absorption can explain opacity at z>3 if the gas is warm and moderately metal-enriched.
Host galaxy gas dominates X-ray absorption at lower redshifts.
Abstract
The intrinsic X-ray emission of Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) is often found to be absorbed over and above the column density through our own galaxy. The extra component is usually assumed to be due to absorbing gas lying within the host galaxy of the GRB itself. There is an apparent correlation between the equivalent column density of hydrogen, N(H,intrinsic) (assuming it to be at the GRB redshift), and redshift, z, with the few z>6 GRBs showing the greatest intrinsic column densities. We investigate the N(H,intrinsic) - z relation using a large sample of Swift GRBs, as well as active galactic nuclei (AGN) and quasar samples, paying particular attention to the spectral energy distributions of the two highest redshift GRBs. Various possible sample biases and systematics that might produce such a correlation are considered, and we conclude that the correlation is very likely to be real. This…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
