GOTO identification and broadband modelling of the counterpart to the SVOM GRB 250818B
S. Belkin, G. P. Lamb, K. Ackley, M. E. Wortley, S. McGee, G. Schroeder, M. Shrestha, B. P. Gompertz, D. K. Galloway, R. Starling, W.-f. Fong, T. Laskar, C. Liu, A. C. Gordon, N. Pankov, A. E. Volvach, L. N. Volvach, A. Shein, A. Pozanenko, M. J. Dyer, J. Lyman, K. Ulaczyk

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed broadband analysis of the short GRB 250818B, emphasizing the importance of rapid multi-wavelength follow-up and modeling to understand its properties and host environment.
Contribution
It presents the first multi-wavelength broadband modeling of GRB 250818B, revealing a two-component jet and energy injection, and discusses host galaxy ambiguity in the context of rapid follow-up.
Findings
GRB 250818B is unusually luminous for a short GRB across X-ray, optical, and radio.
The afterglow is best modeled by a two-component jet with energy injection.
Host galaxy association remains uncertain, affecting offset interpretation.
Abstract
Rapid localisation and follow-up of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) increasingly rely on low-latency triggers from new missions coupled to wide-field robotic optical facilities. We present the discovery and multi-wavelength follow-up of GRB 250818B, detected by the Space Variable Objects Monitor (SVOM) and localised optically by the Gravitational-wave Optical Transient Observer (GOTO). We compile and homogenise X-ray, optical/NIR, and radio data to build broadband light curves and spectral energy distributions. The afterglow is unusually luminous for a nominal short GRB, lying on the bright end of the short-GRB population in X-rays and optical and among the most luminous high-redshift short-GRB afterglows in the radio. MeerKAT detects the source at 3.1 GHz, while ALMA provides deep higher-frequency limits. Keck/LRIS spectroscopy shows continuum and metal absorption (Fe II, Mg II, Mg I), giving…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
