Finding high-redshift gamma-ray bursts in tandem near-infrared and optical surveys
S. Campana (1), G. Ghirlanda (1,2), R. Salvaterra (3), O.A. Gonzalez, (4), M. Landoni (1), G. Pariani (1), A. Riva5, M. Riva (1), S.J. Smartt (6),, N.R. Tanvir (7), S.D. Vergani (8) ((1) INAF-OAB, (2) INFN-U Bicocca, (3), INAF-IASF-Mi, (4) STFC-UKATC, (5) INAF-OAT, (6) QUB

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel method to discover high-redshift gamma-ray bursts by comparing near-infrared and optical survey data, enabling the identification of distant GRBs more efficiently than previous methods.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new approach utilizing simultaneous nIR and optical observations to detect high-redshift GRBs based on their unique absorption features and color indices.
Findings
Can identify ~11 GRBs at z>6 annually
Potential to discover ~3 GRBs at z>10 per year
Offers an effective probe of the early Universe
Abstract
The race for the most distant object in the Universe has been played by long-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), star-forming galaxies and quasars. GRBs took a temporary lead with the discovery of GRB 090423 at a redshift z=8.2, but now the record-holder is the galaxy GN-z11 at z=11.0. Despite this record, galaxies and quasars are very faint (GN-z11 has a magnitude H=26), hampering the study of the physical properties of the primordial Universe. On the other hand, GRB afterglows are brighter by a factor of >100, with the drawback of lasting only for 1-2 days. Here we describe a novel approach to the discovery of high-redshift (z>6) GRBs, exploiting their near-infrared (nIR) emission properties. Soon after the bright, high-energy prompt phase, a GRB is accompanied by an afterglow. The afterglows of high-redshift GRBs are naturally absorbed, like any other source, at optical wavelengths by…
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