SIMBAD references

2009ApJ...691L..27P - Astrophys. J., 691, L27-L32 (2009/January-3)

The first positive detection of molecular gas in a GRB host galaxy.

PROCHASKA J.X., SHEFFER Y., PERLEY D.A., BLOOM J.S., LOPEZ L.A., DESSAUGES-ZAVADSKY M., CHEN H.-W., FILIPPENKO A.V., GANESHALINGAM M., LI W., MILLER A.A. and STARR D.

Abstract (from CDS):

We report on strong H2 and CO absorption from gas within the host galaxy of gamma-ray burst (GRB) 080607. Analysis of our Keck/LRIS afterglow spectrum reveals a very large H I column density () and strong metal-line absorption at zGRB= 3.0363 with a roughly solar metallicity. We detect a series of A - X bandheads from CO and estimate N(CO) = 1016.5±0.3/cm2 and T COex> 100 K. We argue that the high excitation temperature results from UV pumping of the CO gas by the GRB afterglow. Similarly, we observe H2 absorption via the Lyman-Werner bands and estimate with-300 K. The afterglow photometry suggests an extinction law with RV~ 4 and AV~ 3.2 mag and requires the presence of a modest 2175 Å bump. Additionally, modeling of the Swift XRT X-ray spectrum confirms a large column density with NH= 1022.58±0.04/cm2. Remarkably, this molecular gas has extinction properties, metallicity, and a CO/H2 ratio comparable to those of translucent molecular clouds of the Milky Way, suggesting that star formation at high z proceeds in similar environments as today. However, the integrated dust-to-metals ratio is sub-Galactic, suggesting the dust is primarily associated with the molecular phase while the atomic gas has a much lower dust-to-gas ratio. Sightlines like GRB 080607 serve as powerful probes of nucleosynthesis and star-forming regions in the young universe and contribute to the population of "dark" GRB afterglows.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): gamma rays: bursts - ISM: molecules

Simbad objects: 3

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