Discovery of the optical afterglow and host galaxy of short GRB181123B at $z =1.754$: Implications for Delay Time Distributions
K. Paterson, W. Fong, A. Nugent, A. Rouco Escorial, J. Leja, T., Laskar, R. Chornock, A. A. Miller, J. Scharw\"achter, S. B. Cenko, D. Perley,, N. R. Tanvir, A. Levan, A. Cucchiara, B. E. Cobb, K. De, E. Berger, G., Terreran, K. D. Alexander, M. Nicholl, P. K. Blanchard

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of the optical afterglow and host galaxy of a high-redshift short gamma-ray burst, providing insights into the delay time distribution models and implications for the formation channels of such bursts.
Contribution
It presents the first secure optical afterglow detection of a short GRB at z=1.754 and analyzes its implications for delay time distribution models of short GRBs.
Findings
GRB 181123B is the most distant secure optical afterglow detection of a short GRB.
High-redshift short GRBs can significantly influence delay time distribution models.
Power-law delay models are consistent with the observed redshift distribution and suggest about 30% of Swift short GRBs are at z>1.
Abstract
We present the discovery of the optical afterglow and host galaxy of the {\it Swift} short-duration gamma-ray burst, GRB\,181123B. Observations with Gemini-North starting at ~hr after the burst reveal a faint optical afterglow with ~mag, at an angular offset of 0.59 0.16 from its host galaxy. Using observations, we measure a photometric redshift of the host galaxy of . From a combination of Gemini and Keck spectroscopy of the host galaxy spanning 4500-18000~\AA , we detect a single emission line at 13390~\AA, inferred as H at and corroborating the photometric redshift. The host galaxy properties of GRB\,181123B are typical to those of other SGRB hosts, with an inferred stellar mass of , mass-weighted age of ~Gyr and optical luminosity…
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