ZTF20aajnksq (AT2020blt): A Fast Optical Transient at $z \approx 2.9$ With No Detected Gamma-Ray Burst Counterpart
Anna Y. Q. Ho (1), Daniel A. Perley (2), Paz Beniamini (1), S. Bradley, Cenko (3, 4), S. R. Kulkarni (1), Igor Andreoni (1), Leo P. Singer (3),, Kishalay De (1), Mansi M. Kasliwal (1), Christoffer Fremling (1), Eric C., Bellm (5), Richard Dekany (6), Alexandre Delacroix (6)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and analysis of a fast, luminous optical transient at high redshift with afterglow-like features but no detected gamma-ray burst, suggesting it was a classical GRB missed by satellites.
Contribution
The study presents a detailed characterization of AT2020blt, a fast optical transient with afterglow features, and discusses its implications for GRB detection and transient rates in optical surveys.
Findings
AT2020blt exhibits afterglow-like light curves and luminosities.
No gamma-ray burst was detected despite afterglow features.
The transient rate aligns with classical GRB occurrence estimates.
Abstract
We present ZTF20aajnksq (AT2020blt), a fast-fading ( mag in days) red ( mag) and luminous () optical transient at discovered by the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF). AT2020blt shares several features in common with afterglows to long-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs): (1) an optical light curve well-described by a broken power-law with a break at day (observer-frame); (2) a luminous X-ray counterpart; and (3) luminous ( at 10 GHz) radio emission. However, no GRB was detected in the 0.74d between the last ZTF non-detection () and the first ZTF detection (), with an upper limit on the isotropic-equivalent gamma-ray energy release of $E_{\gamma,\mathrm{iso}}…
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