The 2175 Å Extinction Feature in the Optical Afterglow Spectrum of GRB 180325A at z = 2.25*

Authors
  • T. Zafar
  • K.E. Heintz
  • J.P.U. Fynbo
  • D. Malesani
  • J. Bolmer
  • C. Ledoux
  • M. Arabsalmani
  • L. Kaper
  • S. Campana
  • R.L.C. Starling
  • J. Selsing
  • D.A. Kann
  • A. de Ugarte Postigo
  • T. Schweyer
  • L. Christensen
  • P. Møller
  • J. Japelj
  • D. Perley
  • N.R. Tanvir
  • P. D'Avanzo
  • D.H. Hartmann
  • J. Hjorth
  • S. Covino
  • B. Sbarufatti
  • P. Jakobsson
  • L. Izzo
  • R. Salvaterra
  • V. D'Elia
  • D. Xu
Publication date 18-06-2018
Journal Astrophysical Journal Letters
Article number L21
Volume | Issue number 860 | 2
Number of pages 7
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
The ultraviolet (UV) extinction feature at 2175 Å is ubiquitously observed in the Galaxy but is rarely detected at high redshifts. Here we report the spectroscopic detection of the 2175 Å bump on the sightline to the γ-ray burst (GRB) afterglow GRB 180325A at z = 2.2486, the only unambiguous detection over the past 10 years of GRB follow-up, at four different epochs with the Nordic Optical Telescope (NOT) and the Very Large Telescope (VLT)/X-shooter. Additional photometric observations of the afterglow are obtained with the Gamma-Ray burst Optical and Near-Infrared Detector (GROND). We construct the near-infrared to X-ray spectral energy distributions (SEDs) at four spectroscopic epochs. The SEDs are well described by a single power law and an extinction law with R V  ≈ 4.4, A V  ≈ 1.5, and the 2175 Å extinction feature. The bump strength and extinction curve are shallower than the average Galactic extinction curve. We determine a metallicity of [Zn/H] > −0.98 from the VLT/X-shooter spectrum. We detect strong neutral carbon associated with the GRB with equivalent width of W r(λ 1656) = 0.85 ± 0.05. We also detect optical emission lines from the host galaxy. Based on the Hα emission-line flux, the derived dust-corrected star formation rate is ~46 ± 4 M ⊙ yr−1 and the predicted stellar mass is log M */M ⊙ ~ 9.3 ± 0.4, suggesting that the host galaxy is among the main-sequence star-forming galaxies.
Document type Article
Language English
Related dataset GROND, NOT & VLT/X-shooter obs. of GRB180325A : J/ApJ/860/L21
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/aaca3f
Other links http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2018ApJ...860L..21Z
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