The ultra-long GRB 111209A - II. Prompt to afterglow and afterglow properties
G. Stratta, B. Gendre, J.L. Atteia, M. Bo\"er, D.M. Coward, M. De, Pasquale, E. Howell, A. Klotz, S. Oates, L. Piro

TL;DR
This study provides a detailed multi-band analysis of the ultra-long GRB 111209A, revealing unique optical delay, dust extinction, and spectral features, which shed light on its progenitor and complex emission mechanisms.
Contribution
It offers new insights into the prompt and afterglow properties of the longest observed GRB, proposing a binary formation scenario for its blue supergiant progenitor.
Findings
Unprecedented optical delay of 410+/-50 seconds.
Detection of a hard spectral component during X-ray steep decay.
Optical afterglow shows a flux decay with index 1.6 and late re-brightening.
Abstract
The "ultra-long" Gamma Ray Burst GRB 111209A at redshift z=0.677, is so far the longest GRB ever observed, with rest frame prompt emission duration of ~4 hours. In order to explain the bursts exceptional longevity, a low metallicity blue supergiant progenitor has been invoked. In this work, we further investigate this peculiar burst by performing a multi-band temporal and spectral analysis of both the prompt and the afterglow emission. We use proprietary and publicly available data from Swift, Konus Wind, XMM-Newton, TAROT as well as from other ground based optical and radio telescopes. We find some peculiar properties that are possibly connected to the exceptional nature of this burst, namely: i) an unprecedented large optical delay of 410+/-50 s is measured between the peak epochs of a marked flare observed also in gamma-rays after about 2 ks from the first Swift/BAT trigger; ii) if…
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