Rapid Response Mode observations of GRB 160203A: Looking for fine-structure line variability at z=3.52
G. Pugliese, A. Saccardi, V. D Elia, S. D. Vergani, K. E. Heintz, S., Savaglio, L. Kaper, A. de Ugarte Postigo, D. H. Hartmann, A. De Cia, S., Vejlgaard, J. P. U. Fynbo, L. Christensen, S. Campana, D. van Rest, J., Selsing, K. Wiersema, D. B. Malesani, S. Covino, D. Burgarella

TL;DR
This study used rapid-response spectroscopy of GRB 160203A to investigate the variability of fine-structure lines, providing insights into the host galaxy's properties and the environment of the burst at high redshift.
Contribution
First detailed temporal analysis of fine-structure line variability in a GRB afterglow at z=3.52 using rapid-response VLT/X-shooter spectra.
Findings
No significant variability detected in fine-structure lines.
Estimated GRB-host distance less than 300 pc.
Host galaxy shows high metallicity and dust depletion at z=3.52.
Abstract
Gamma-ray bursts are the most energetic known explosions. Despite fading rapidly, they allow to measure redshift and important properties of their host-galaxies. We report the photometric and spectroscopic study of GRB 160203A and its host-galaxy. Fine-structure absorption lines, detected in the afterglow at different epochs, allow us to investigate variability due to the strong fading background source. We obtained two optical to near-infrared spectra of the afterglow with X-shooter on ESO/VLT, 18 min and 5.7 hrs after the burst, allowing us to investigate temporal changes of fine-structure absorption lines. We measured HI column density log N(HI/cm-2)=21.75+/-0.10, and several heavy-element ions along the GRB sight-line in the host-galaxy: SiII,AlII,AlIII,CII,NiII,SiIV,CIV,ZnII,FeII, and FeII and SiII fine structure transitions from energetic levels excited by the afterglow, at a…
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