The puzzling long GRB 191019A: Evidence for Kilonova Light
G. Stratta, A. M. Nicuesa Guelbenzu, S. Klose, A. Rossi, P. Singh, E., Palazzi, C. Guidorzi, A. Camisasca, S. Bernuzzi, A. Rau, M. Bulla, F., Ragosta, E. Maiorano, and D. Paris

TL;DR
This paper presents evidence that the long GRB 191019A is likely associated with a kilonova resulting from a compact binary merger, challenging previous assumptions of a dense environment and suggesting an intrinsic long duration.
Contribution
The study introduces a new diagnostic tool for classifying long GRBs as merger-related and provides multi-wavelength analysis confirming a kilonova origin for GRB 191019A.
Findings
GRB 191019A shows kilonova features similar to GW170817
Standard circumburst density conditions fit the data better
The long duration is intrinsic, not due to dense environment
Abstract
GRB 191019A was a long Gamma-ray burst (GRB) lasting about 65 s and, as such, originally thought to be linked to a core-collapse supernova. However, even though follow-up observations identified the optical counterpart close to the bright nucleus of a nearby ancient galaxy (z=0.248), no associated supernova was found. This led to the suggestion that the burst was caused by the merger of two compact stellar objects, likely in a dense circumnuclear environment. By using a recently developed diagnostic tool based on prompt emission temporal properties, we noticed that GRB 191019A falls among those long GRBs which are associated with compact mergers and with evidence of kilonova light. We thus re-analyzed unpublished GROND multi-color (g'r'i'z'JHK_s) data obtained between 0.4 and 15 days post trigger. Image subtraction confirmed the optical counterpart in all four optical bands, with GROND…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
