The Burst Cluster: Dark Matter in a Cluster Merger Associated with the Short Gamma Ray Burst, GRB 050509B
Hakon Dahle, Craig L. Sarazin, Laura A. Lopez, Chryssa Kouveliotou,, Sandeep K. Patel, Evert Rol, Alexander J. van der Horst, Johan P. Fynbo,, Ralph A. M. J. Wijers, David N. Burrows, Neil Gehrels, Dirk Grupe, Enrico, Ramirez-Ruiz, Michal J. Michalowski

TL;DR
This paper studies a galaxy cluster merger associated with a short gamma-ray burst, using multi-wavelength data and weak lensing to explore dark matter properties and the environment of short GRBs.
Contribution
It presents a detailed analysis of a cluster merger linked to a short GRB, including weak lensing and X-ray observations, to investigate dark matter and GRB environments.
Findings
Detected separation between X-ray and mass centroids, similar to the Bullet cluster.
Confirmed the cluster merger as a candidate for dark matter studies.
Provided insights into the environment of short GRBs in merging clusters.
Abstract
We have identified a merging galaxy cluster with evidence of two distinct sub-clusters. The X-ray and optical data suggest that the subclusters are moving away from each other after closest approach. This cluster merger was discovered from observations of the well localized short-duration gamma-ray burst (GRB), GRB 050509B. The Swift/Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) source position is coincident with a cluster of galaxies ZwCl 1234.0+02916. The subsequent Swift/X-Ray Telescope (XRT) localization of the X-ray afterglow found the GRB coincident with 2MASX J12361286+2858580, a giant red elliptical galaxy in the cluster. Deep multi-epoch optical images were obtained to constrain the evolution of the GRB afterglow, including a 27480s exposure in the F814W band with Hubble Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS), among the deepest imaging ever obtained towards a known galaxy cluster in a…
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