The nature of GRB host galaxies from chemical abundances
Marco Palla, Francesca Matteucci, Francesco Calura, Francesco Longo

TL;DR
This study uses chemical abundance ratios in GRB host galaxies to determine their types and ages, revealing diverse galaxy morphologies and evolutionary stages at high redshift.
Contribution
It introduces updated chemical evolution models with new stellar yields and dust prescriptions to identify galaxy types and ages from GRB host spectra.
Findings
Two hosts are ellipticals, two are spirals, three are irregulars.
Host galaxy ages range from ~10 Myr to over 1 Gyr.
Changing the initial mass function improves model-data agreement.
Abstract
We try to identify the nature of high redshift long Gamma-Ray Bursts (LGRBs) host galaxies by comparing the observed abundance ratios in the interstellar medium with detailed chemical evolution models accounting for the presence of dust. We compared measured abundance data from LGRB afterglow spectra to abundance patterns as predicted by our models for different galaxy types. We analysed in particular [X/Fe] abundance ratios (where X is C, N, O, Mg, Si, S, Ni, Zn) as functions of [Fe/H]. Different galaxies (irregulars, spirals, ellipticals) are, in fact, characterised by different star formation histories, which produce different [X/Fe] ratios ("time-delay model"). This allows us to identify the morphology of the hosts and to infer their age (i.e. the time elapsed from the beginning of star formation) at the time of the GRB events, as well as other important parameters. Relative to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
