Herschel observations of gamma-ray burst host galaxies: implications for the topology of the dusty interstellar medium
P.Schady, S.Savaglio, T.Mueller, T.Kruehler, T.Dwelly, E.Palazzi,, L.K.Hunt, J.Greiner, H.Linz, M.J.Michalowski, D.Pierini, S.Piranomonte,, S.D.Vergani, W.K.Gear

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel observations to explore dust properties in gamma-ray burst host galaxies, revealing that dust extinction along the line of sight correlates with high dust mass in the host's interstellar medium, informing star formation studies.
Contribution
It provides new Herschel-based insights into the dust attenuation and star formation in GRB host galaxies, highlighting the importance of line-of-sight extinction as an indicator of dust-rich environments.
Findings
Only one of five dust-rich GRB hosts was detected by Herschel.
High dust extinction along the line of sight correlates with higher dust mass in hosts.
Dust along the line of sight mainly resides within the host galaxy's ISM.
Abstract
Long-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are indisputably related to star formation, and their vast luminosity in gamma rays pin-points regions of star formation independent of galaxy mass. As such, GRBs provide a unique tool for studying star forming galaxies out to high-z independent of luminosity. Most of our understanding of the properties of GRB hosts (GRBHs) comes from optical and near-infrared (NIR) follow-up observations, and we therefore have relatively little knowledge of the fraction of dust-enshrouded star formation that resides within GRBHs. Currently ~20% of GRBs show evidence of significant amounts of dust along the line of sight to the afterglow through the host galaxy, and these GRBs tend to reside within redder and more massive galaxies than GRBs with optically bright afterglows. In this paper we present Herschel observations of five GRBHs with evidence of being…
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