The Afterglow and Early-Type Host Galaxy of the Short GRB 150101B at z=0.1343
Wen-fai Fong, Raffaella Margutti, Ryan Chornock, Edo Berger, Benjamin, J. Shappee, Andrew J. Levan, Nial R. Tanvir, Nathan Smith, Peter A. Milne,, Tanmoy Laskar, Derek B. Fox, Ragnhild Lunnan, Peter K. Blanchard, Jens, Hjorth, Klaas Wiersema, Alexander J. van der Horst

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and analysis of the nearby short GRB 150101B, its host galaxy properties, and implications for progenitor models and kilonova detection efforts.
Contribution
It provides detailed characterization of the host galaxy and afterglow, and discusses the challenges of detecting kilonovae associated with short GRBs at cosmological distances.
Findings
GRB 150101B is the closest short GRB with an early-type host.
The host galaxy has a stellar mass of ~7x10^10 M_sol and is one of the most luminous for short GRB hosts.
Kilonova emission is constrained to be below 2-4x10^41 erg s^-1, highlighting detection challenges.
Abstract
We present the discovery of the X-ray and optical afterglows of the short-duration GRB 150101B, pinpointing the event to an early-type host galaxy at z=0.1343 +/- 0.0030. This makes GRB 150101B the most nearby short GRB with an early-type host galaxy discovered to date. Fitting the spectral energy distribution of the host galaxy results in an inferred stellar mass of ~7x10^10 M_sol, stellar population age of ~2-2.5 Gyr, and star formation rate of <0.4 M_sol yr^-1. The host of GRB 150101B is one of the largest and most luminous short GRB host galaxies, with a B-band luminosity of ~4.3L* and half-light radius of ~8 kpc. GRB 150101B is located at a projected distance of 7.35 +/- 0.07 kpc from its host center, and lies on a faint region of its host rest-frame optical light. Its location, combined with the lack of associated supernova, is consistent with a NS-NS/NS-BH merger progenitor. From…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
