The low-extinction afterglow in the solar-metallicity host galaxy of gamma-ray burst 110918A
J. Elliott, T. Kr\"uhler, J. Greiner, S. Savaglio, F. Olivares E., A., Rau, A. de Ugarte Postigo, R. S\'anchez-Ram\'irez, K. Wiersema, P. Schady, D., A. Kann, R. Filgas, M. Nardini, E. Berger, D. Fox, J. Gorosabel, S. Klose, A., Levan, A. Nicuesa Guelbenzu, A. Rossi, S. Schmidl

TL;DR
This study presents a detailed analysis of the host galaxy of gamma-ray burst 110918A, revealing it to be a high-metallicity, massive galaxy with low extinction, challenging previous assumptions about GRB host environments.
Contribution
It provides one of the first robust metallicity measurements of a z~1 GRB host, showing high metallicity and large stellar mass, thus challenging the metallicity cut-off hypothesis.
Findings
GRB 110918A had low extinction with A_V=0.16 mag.
Host galaxy has high stellar mass (log(M_*/M_sun)=10.68).
Host galaxy's metallicity is around solar (12+log(O/H)=8.93).
Abstract
Metallicity is theoretically thought to be a fundamental driver in gamma-ray burst (GRB) explosions and energetics, but is still, even after more than a decade of extensive studies, not fully understood. This is largely related to two phenomena: a dust-extinction bias, that prevented high-mass and thus likely high-metallicity GRB hosts to be detected in the first place, and a lack of efficient instrumentation, that limited spectroscopic studies including metallicity measurements to the low-redshift end of the GRB host population. The subject of this work is the very energetic GRB 110918A, for which we measure a redshift of z=0.984. GRB 110918A gave rise to a luminous afterglow with an intrinsic spectral slope of b=0.70, which probed a sight-line with little extinction (A_V=0.16 mag) typical of the established distributions of afterglow properties. Photometric and spectroscopic follow-up…
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