GRB 180418A: A possibly-short GRB with a wide-angle outflow in a faint host galaxy
Alicia Rouco Escorial, Wen-fai Fong, Peter Veres, Tanmoy Laskar, Amy, Lien, Kerry Paterson, Maura Lally, Peter K. Blanchard, Anya E. Nugent, Nial, R. Tanvir, Dylaan Cornish, Edo Berger, Eric Burns, Brad Cenko, Bethany E., Cobb, Antonio Cucchiara, Adam Goldstein

TL;DR
This paper analyzes GRB 180418A, suggesting it may be a short GRB with a wide-angle outflow in a faint host galaxy, based on multi-wavelength observations, duration analysis, and modeling of its afterglow and host properties.
Contribution
It provides a detailed multi-band observational analysis and modeling of GRB 180418A, exploring its classification and physical properties, and discusses its implications for short and long GRB origins.
Findings
GRB 180418A has a duration of about 2 seconds, with a 60% probability of being a short-hard burst.
The X-ray afterglow lasted over a month, showing a single power-law decline.
The host galaxy is faint and offset from the burst location, with properties consistent with both short and long GRB scenarios.
Abstract
We present X-ray and multi-band optical observations of the afterglow and host galaxy of GRB 180418A, discovered by /BAT and /GBM. We present a reanalysis of the GBM and BAT data deriving durations of the prompt emission of 2.56s and 1.90s, respectively. Modeling the /GBM catalog of 1405 bursts (2008-2014) in the Hardness- plane, we obtain a probability of 60% that GRB 180418A is a short-hard burst. From a combination of /XRT and observations, the X-ray afterglow is detected to 38.5 days after the burst, and exhibits a single power-law decline with . Late-time Gemini observations reveal a faint r25.69 mag host galaxy at an angular offset of 0.16''. At the likely redshift range of z1-2.25, we find that the X-ray…
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