A blast from the infant Universe: the very high-z GRB 210905A
A.Rossi, D. D. Frederiks, D. A. Kann, M. De Pasquale, E. Pian, G., Lamb, P. D'Avanzo, L. Izzo, A. J. Levan, D. B. Malesani, A. Melandri, A., Nicuesa Guelbenzu, S. Schulze, R. Strausbaugh, N. R. Tanvir, L. Amati, S., Campana, A.Cucchiara, G. Ghirlanda, M. Della Valle, S. Klose

TL;DR
This paper reports on the detailed multi-wavelength follow-up of the extremely energetic high-redshift gamma-ray burst GRB 210905A, revealing its luminosity, jet structure, and implications for early universe progenitors.
Contribution
It provides the highest measured jet opening angle for a z>6 GRB and discusses the implications for the central engine and progenitor evolution at high redshift.
Findings
GRB 210905A is among the most energetic and luminous observed at high redshift.
The jet opening angle is the largest measured for a z>6 burst, at 8.4 degrees.
The burst's energetics suggest a black hole central engine, not a magnetar.
Abstract
We present a detailed follow-up of the very energetic GRB 210905A at a high redshift of z = 6.312 and its luminous X-ray and optical afterglow. We obtained a photometric and spectroscopic follow-up in the optical and near-infrared (NIR), covering both the prompt and afterglow emission from a few minutes up to 20 Ms after burst. With an isotropic gamma-ray energy release of Eiso = 1.27E54 erg, GRB 210905A lies in the top ~7% of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) in terms of energy released. Its afterglow is among the most luminous ever observed. It starts with a shallow evolution that can be explained by energy injection, and it is followed by a steeper decay, while the spectral energy distribution is in agreement with slow cooling in a constant-density environment within the standard fireball theory. A jet break at ~ 46.2+-16.3 d (~6.3 d rest-frame) has been observed in the X-ray light curve;…
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