The First Short GRB Millimeter Afterglow: The Wide-Angled Jet of the Extremely Energetic SGRB 211106A
Tanmoy Laskar, Alicia Rouco Escorial, Genevieve Schroeder, Wen-fai, Fong, Edo Berger, P\'eter Veres, Shivani Bhandari, Jillian Rastinejad,, Charles D. Kilpatrick, Aaron Tohuvavohu, Raffaella Margutti, Kate D., Alexander, James DeLaunay, Jamie A. Kennea, Anya Nugent, K. Paterson

TL;DR
This paper reports the first millimeter afterglow detection of a short gamma-ray burst, revealing a wide-angled, highly energetic jet and high dust extinction, providing new insights into SGRB jet structure and environment.
Contribution
It presents the first millimeter afterglow detection of an SGRB and characterizes its jet properties, including opening angle and energy, using ALMA observations.
Findings
Detected millimeter afterglow of SGRB 211106A
Inferred a wide jet opening angle of ~15.5 degrees
Estimated a high kinetic energy of ~10^51.8 erg
Abstract
We present the discovery of the first millimeter afterglow of a short-duration -ray burst (SGRB) and the first confirmed afterglow of an SGRB localized by the GUANO system on Swift. Our Atacama Large Millimeter/Sub-millimeter Array (ALMA) detection of SGRB 211106A establishes an origin in a faint host galaxy detected in Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging at . From the lack of a detectable optical afterglow, coupled with the bright millimeter counterpart, we infer a high extinction, mag along the line of sight, making this the one of the most highly dust-extincted SGRBs known to date. The millimeter-band light curve captures the passage of the synchrotron peak from the afterglow forward shock and reveals a jet break at ~days. For a presumed redshift of , we infer an opening angle, $\theta_{\rm…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astro and Planetary Science
