Constraints on Short Gamma-Ray Burst Physics and Their Host Galaxies from Systematic Radio Follow-up Campaigns
S. I. Chastain, A. J. van der Horst, G. E. Anderson, L. Rhodes, D., d'Antonio, M. E. Bell, R. P. Fender, P. J. Hancock, A. Horesh, C., Kouveliotou, K. P. Mooley, A. Rowlinson, S. D. Vergani, R. A. M. J. Wijers,, and P. A. Woudt

TL;DR
This paper reports on systematic radio follow-up observations of short gamma-ray bursts, providing constraints on their physical parameters and host galaxies, and discusses implications for understanding their progenitors and environments.
Contribution
It presents the first systematic radio follow-up campaign of short GRBs using MeerKAT, ATCA, and e-MERLIN, including potential afterglow detection and host galaxy identifications.
Findings
Possible detection of a short GRB afterglow from GRB 230217A.
Deep upper limits for other short GRB radio afterglows.
Radio detections of host galaxies for four short GRBs.
Abstract
Short gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are explosive transients caused by binary mergers of compact objects containing at least one neutron star. Multi-wavelength afterglow observations provide constraints on the physical parameters of the jet, its surrounding medium, and the microphysics of the enhanced magnetic fields and accelerated electrons in the blast wave at the front of the jet. The synchrotron radio emission can be tracked for much longer than in other spectral regimes, and it can pin down the evolution of the spectral peak. We present the results of a systematic observing campaign of eight short GRBs with the MeerKAT radio telescope. Additionally, we present observations of four of these short GRBs using the ATCA radio telescope and two of these short GRBs with the e-MERLIN radio telescope. Using these results we report one possible detection of a short GRB afterglow from GRB 230217A…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
