The 999th Swift gamma-ray burst: Some like it thermal
F. Nappo, A. Pescalli, G. Oganesyan, G. Ghirlanda, M. Giroletti, A., Melandri, S. Campana, G. Ghisellini, O.S. Salafia, P. D'Avanzo, M.G., Bernardini, S. Covino, E. Carretti, A. Celotti, V. D'Elia, L. Nava, E., Palazzi, S. Poppi, I. Prandoni, S. Righini, A. Rossi, R. Salvaterra

TL;DR
This study of GRB 151027A, the 999th Swift-detected gamma-ray burst, reveals complex multiwavelength emission features, including a thermal blackbody component, a wind-like environment, and late optical bumps possibly due to an underlying supernova and host galaxy.
Contribution
First detailed multiwavelength analysis of the 999th Swift GRB, identifying a thermal component in the prompt emission and environmental properties through extensive radio and optical observations.
Findings
Presence of a thermal blackbody component contributing up to 35% of luminosity.
Detection of a wind-like density profile in the burst environment.
Observation of a late optical bump possibly due to supernova and host galaxy.
Abstract
We present a multiwavelength study of GRB 151027A. This is the 999th GRB detected by the Swift satellite and it has a densely sampled emission in the X-ray and optical band and has been observed and detected in the radio up to 140 days after the prompt. The multiwavelength light curve from 500 s to 140 days can be modelled through a standard forward shock afterglow but requires an additional component to reproduce the early X-ray and optical emission. We present TNG and LBT optical observations performed 19.6, 33.9 and 92.3 days after the trigger which show a bump with respect to a standard afterglow flux decay and are possibly interpreted as due to the underlying SN and host galaxy (of 0.4 uJy in the R band). Radio observations, performed with SRT, Medicina, EVN and VLBA between day 4 and 140, suggest that the burst exploded in an environment characterised by a density profile scaling…
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