Spectroscopy of the short-hard GRB 130603B: The host galaxy and environment of a compact object merger
A. de Ugarte Postigo, C.C. Thoene, A. Rowlinson, R. Garcia-Benito,, A.J. Levan, J. Gorosabel, P. Goldoni, S. Schulze, T. Zafar, K. Wiersema, R., Sanchez-Ramirez, A. Melandri, P. D'Avanzo, S. Oates, V. D'Elia, M. De, Pasquale, T. Kruehler, A. J. van der Horst, D. Xu, D. Watson

TL;DR
This study presents the first spectroscopic analysis of a short-hard gamma-ray burst afterglow, revealing its redshift, environment, and host galaxy properties, thereby advancing understanding of compact object mergers and their locations.
Contribution
First spectroscopic characterization of a short GRB afterglow, providing detailed insights into its redshift, host galaxy, and local environment, which was previously limited due to faintness.
Findings
Redshift determined as z = 0.3565
Located at galaxy edge in a dense, star-forming region
Explosion site differs from typical long GRB environments
Abstract
Short duration gamma-ray bursts (SGRBs) are thought to be related to the violent merger of compact objects, such as neutron stars or black holes, which makes them promising sources of gravitational waves. The detection of a 'kilonova'-like signature associated to the Swift-detected GRB 130603B has suggested that this event is the result of a compact object merger. Our knowledge on SGRB has been, until now, mostly based on the absence of supernova signatures and the analysis of the host galaxies to which they cannot always be securely associated. Further progress has been significantly hampered by the faintness and rapid fading of their optical counterparts (afterglows), which has so far precluded spectroscopy of such events. Afterglow spectroscopy is the key tool to firmly determine the distance at which the burst was produced, crucial to understand its physics, and study its local…
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