The distant, galaxy cluster environment of the short GRB 161104A at $z\sim 0.8$ and a comparison to the short GRB host population
Anya E. Nugent (Northwestern, CIERA), Wen-fai Fong, Yuxin Dong,, Antonella Palmese, Joel Leja, Alicia Rouco Escorial, Peter K. Blanchard,, Kerry Paterson, Ryan Chornock, Andrew Monson, Matt Nicholl, and Edo Berger

TL;DR
This study characterizes the host galaxy of short GRB 161104A at z~0.8, revealing it as an early-type, quiescent galaxy in a galaxy cluster outskirts, and compares its properties to other short GRB hosts, highlighting environmental influences.
Contribution
It provides detailed stellar population analysis of GRB 161104A's host and compares it to a sample of other short GRB hosts, emphasizing the role of galaxy clusters in short GRB environments.
Findings
GRB 161104A host is an early-type, quiescent galaxy on a cluster outskirts.
The host is more distant, less massive, and younger than other cluster-associated short GRB hosts.
Cluster short GRBs tend to have faint afterglows, especially in X-ray and optical bands.
Abstract
We present optical observations of the Swift short-duration gamma-ray burst (GRB) GRB 161104A and its host galaxy at . We model the multiband photometry and spectroscopy with the stellar population inference code Prospector, and explore the posterior using nested sampling. We find that the mass-weighted age ~Gyr, stellar mass , metallicity , dust extinction mag, and the star formation rate ~yr. These properties, along with a prominent 4000 Angstrom break and optical absorption lines classify this host as an early-type, quiescent galaxy. Using Dark Energy Survey galaxy catalogues, we demonstrate that the host of GRB 161104A resides on the outskirts of a galaxy cluster at ,…
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