A search for radio afterglows from gamma-ray bursts with the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder
James K. Leung, Tara Murphy, Giancarlo Ghirlanda, David L. Kaplan,, Emil Lenc, Dougal Dobie, Julie Banfield, Catherine Hale, Aidan Hotan, David, McConnell, Vanessa A. Moss, Joshua Pritchard, Wasim Raja, Adam J. Stewart and, Matthew Whiting

TL;DR
This study conducted a comprehensive radio search for afterglows from gamma-ray bursts using ASKAP, leading to the detection of one candidate and insights into the burst's environment and shock physics.
Contribution
First radio afterglow detection from a gamma-ray burst with ASKAP, demonstrating the survey's capability to identify and analyze afterglows and their environments.
Findings
Detected one radio afterglow candidate associated with GRB 171205A.
Confirmed the afterglow with follow-up observations up to 884 days post-burst.
Derived shock microphysical parameters indicating a wind-like circumburst medium.
Abstract
We present a search for radio afterglows from long gamma-ray bursts using the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP). Our search used the Rapid ASKAP Continuum Survey, covering the entire celestial sphere south of declination , and three epochs of the Variables and Slow Transients Pilot Survey (Phase 1), covering square degrees per epoch. The observations we used from these surveys spanned a nine-month period from 2019 April 21 to 2020 January 11. We crossmatched radio sources found in these surveys with 779 well-localised (to ) long gamma-ray bursts occurring after 2004 and determined whether the associations were more likely afterglow- or host-related through the analysis of optical images. In our search, we detected one radio afterglow candidate associated with GRB 171205A, a local low-luminosity gamma-ray burst with a supernova…
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