Spectrophotometric analysis of GRB afterglow extinction curves with X-shooter
J. Japelj, S. Covino, A. Gomboc, S. D. Vergani, P. Goldoni, J., Selsing, Z. Cano, V. D'Elia, H. Flores, J. P. U. Fynbo, F. Hammer, J. Hjorth,, P. Jakobsson, L. Kaper, D. Kopa\v{c}, T. Kr\"uhler, A. Melandri, S., Piranomonte, R. S\'anchez-Ram\'irez, G. Tagliaferri, N. R. Tanvir

TL;DR
This study uses high-quality X-shooter spectra of GRB afterglows to measure and analyze dust extinction properties, demonstrating that spectroscopic data provide more accurate constraints than photometry.
Contribution
It presents a detailed spectroscopic analysis of GRB afterglow extinction curves, highlighting the advantages over photometric methods and identifying the preferred extinction curves in GRB lines-of-sight.
Findings
SMC extinction curve is preferred in most cases.
Spectroscopic data better constrain dust properties than photometry.
Extinction and spectral slope can differ significantly between methods.
Abstract
In this work we use gamma-ray burst (GRB) afterglow spectra observed with the VLT/X-shooter spectrograph to measure rest-frame extinction in GRB lines-of-sight by modeling the broadband near-infrared (NIR) to X-ray afterglow spectral energy distributions (SEDs). Our sample consists of nine Swift GRBs, eight of them belonging to the long-duration and one to the short-duration class. Dust is modeled using the average extinction curves of the Milky Way and the two Magellanic Clouds. We derive the rest-frame extinction of the entire sample, which fall in the range . Moreover, the SMC extinction curve is the preferred extinction curve template for the majority of our sample, a result which is in agreement with those commonly observed in GRB lines-of-sights. In one analysed case (GRB 120119A), the common extinction curve templates fail to reproduce the…
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