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The Broad-band Counterpart of the Short GRB 200522A at $z=0.5536$: A Luminous Kilonova or a Collimated Outflow with a Reverse Shock?

Authors :
Fong, W.
Laskar, T.
Rastinejad, J.
Escorial, A. Rouco
Schroeder, G.
Barnes, J.
Kilpatrick, C. D.
Paterson, K.
Berger, E.
Metzger, B. D.
Dong, Y.
Nugent, A. E.
Strausbaugh, R.
Blanchard, P. K.
Goyal, A.
Cucchiara, A.
Terreran, G.
Alexander, K. D.
Eftekhari, T.
Fryer, C.
Margalit, B.
Margutti, R.
Nicholl, M.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

We present the discovery of the radio afterglow and near-infrared (NIR) counterpart of the Swift short GRB 200522A, located at a small projected offset of $\approx 1$ kpc from the center of a young, star-forming host galaxy at $z=0.5536$. The radio and X-ray luminosities of the afterglow are consistent with those of on-axis cosmological short GRBs. The NIR counterpart, revealed by our HST observations at a rest-frame time of $\approx2.3$ days, has a luminosity of $\approx (1.3-1.7) \times 10^{42}$ erg s$^{-1}$. This is substantially lower than on-axis short GRB afterglow detections, but is a factor of $\approx 8$-$17$ more luminous than the kilonova of GW170817, and significantly more luminous than any kilonova candidate for which comparable observations exist. The combination of the counterpart's color ($i-y = -0.08\pm 0.21$; rest-frame) and luminosity cannot be explained by standard radioactive heating alone. We present two scenarios to interpret the broad-band behavior of GRB 200522A: a synchrotron forward shock with a luminous kilonova (potentially boosted by magnetar energy deposition), or forward and reverse shocks from a $\approx14^{\circ}$, relativistic ($\Gamma_0 \gtrsim 80$) jet. Models which include a combination of enhanced radioactive heating rates, low-lanthanide mass fractions, or additional sources of heating from late-time central engine activity may provide viable alternate explanations. If a stable magnetar was indeed produced in GRB 200522A, we predict that late-time radio emission will be detectable starting $\approx 0.3$-$6$ years after the burst for a deposited energy of $\approx 10^{53}$ erg. Counterparts of similar luminosity to GRB 200522A associated with gravitational wave events will be detectable with current optical searches to $\approx\!250$ Mpc.<br />Comment: 33 pages, 13 figures, 5 tables. Submitted to AAS Journals

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2008.08593
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/abc74a