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  • The Afterglow and Kilonova ...
    Troja, E.; Castro-Tirado, A. J.; Gonzalez, J Becerra; Hu, Y.; Ryan, G. S.; Cenko, S. B.; Ricci, R.; Novara, G.; Sanchez-Ramirez, R.; Acosta-Pulido, J. A.; Ackley, K. D.; Garcıa, M. D. Caballero; Eikenberry, S. S.; Guziy, S.; Jeong, S.; Lien, A. Y.; Marquez, I.; Pandey, S. B.; Park, I. H.; Sakamoto, T.; Tello, J. C.; Sokolov, I. V.; Tiengo, A.; Valeev, A. F.; Zhang, B. B.; Veilleux, S.

    Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 08/2019, Letnik: 489, Številka: 2
    Journal Article

    GRB 160821B is a short duration gamma-ray burst (GRB) detected and localized by the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory in the outskirts of a spiral galaxy at z = 0.1613, at a projected physical offset of 16 kpc from the galaxy’s center. We present X-ray, optical/nIR, and radio observations of its counterpart and model them with two distinct components of emission: a standard afterglow, arising from the interaction of the relativistic jet with the surrounding medium, and a kilonova, powered by the radioactive decay of the sub-relativistic ejecta. Broadband modelling of the afterglow data reveals a weak reverse shock propagating backward into the jet, and a likely jet-break at 3.5 d. This is consistent with a structured jet seen slightly off-axis (θview ∼ θcore) while expanding into a low-density medium (n ≈ 10−3 cm−3). Analysis of the kilonova properties suggests a rapid evolution towards red colours, similar toAT2017gfo, and a low-nIR luminosity, possibly due to the presence of a long-lived neutron star. The global properties of the environment, the inferred low mass (Mej <~ 0.006 Msun) and velocities (vej >~ 0.05c) of lanthanide-rich ejecta are consistent with a binary neutron star merger progenitor.