A Radio Flare in the Long-lived Afterglow of the Distant Short GRB 210726A: Energy Injection or a Reverse Shock from Shell Collisions?

Open Access
Authors
  • G. Schroeder
  • L. Rhodes
  • T. Laskar
  • A. Nugent
  • A. Rouco Escorial
  • J.C. Rastinejad
  • W.-F. Fong
  • A.J. van der Horst
  • P. Veres
  • K.D. Alexander
  • A. Andersson
  • E. Berger
  • P.K. Blanchard
  • S. Chastain
  • L. Christensen
  • R. Fender
  • D.A. Green
  • P. Groot
  • I. Heywood
  • A. Horesh
  • L. Izzo
  • C.D. Kilpatrick
  • E. Körding
  • A. Lien
  • D.B. Malesani
  • V. McBride
  • K. Mooley
  • A. Rowlinson ORCID logo
  • H. Sears
  • B. Stappers
  • N. Tanvir
  • S.D. Vergani
  • R.A.M.J. Wijers
  • D. Williams-Baldwin
  • P. Woudt
Publication date 01-08-2024
Journal Astrophysical Journal Letters
Article number 139
Volume | Issue number 970 | 2
Number of pages 20
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
We present the discovery of the radio afterglow of the short gamma-ray burst (GRB) 210726A, localized to a galaxy at a photometric redshift of z ∼ 2.4. While radio observations commenced ≲1 day after the burst, no radio emission was detected until ∼11 days. The radio afterglow subsequently brightened by a factor of ∼3 in the span of a week, followed by a rapid decay (a "radio flare"). We find that a forward shock afterglow model cannot self-consistently describe the multiwavelength X-ray and radio data, and underpredicts the flux of the radio flare by a factor of ≈5. We find that the addition of substantial energy injection, which increases the isotropic kinetic energy of the burst by a factor of ≈4, or a reverse shock from a shell collision are viable solutions to match the broadband behavior. At z ∼ 2.4, GRB 210726A is among the highest-redshift short GRBs discovered to date, as well as the most luminous in radio and X-rays. Combining and comparing all previous radio afterglow observations of short GRBs, we find that the majority of published radio searches conclude by ≲10 days after the burst, potentially missing these late-rising, luminous radio afterglows.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad49ab
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