4.6 Article

Four GRB supernovae at redshifts between 0.4 and 0.8

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 622, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201832728

Keywords

gamma-ray burst: individual: GRB 071112C; gamma-ray burst: individual: GRB 111228A; supernovae: individual: SN 2013fu; gamma-ray burst: individual: GRB 130831A; supernovae: individual: SN 2012eb; gamma-ray burst: individual: GRB 120714B

Funding

  1. Thuringer Ministerium fur Bildung, Wissenschaft und Kultur [FKZ 12010-514]
  2. DFG [Kl 766/16-3, Kl/766 13-2]
  3. MPE Garching
  4. Jenaer Graduiertenakademie
  5. TLS Tautenburg
  6. Spanish research project [AYA 2014-58381-P]
  7. Juan de la Cierva Incorporacion [IJCI-2015-26153]
  8. Sofja Kovalevskaja Award
  9. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation of Germany
  10. European Regional Development Fund-Project Engineering applications of microworld physics [CZ. 02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16 019/0000766]
  11. FONDECYT [11170953]
  12. Ministry of Economy, Development, and Tourism's Millennium Science Initiative [IC120009]
  13. DNRF
  14. GROND by the LeibnizPrize [HA 1850/28-1]
  15. JPL/Caltech
  16. W. M. Keck Foundation

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Twenty years ago, GRB 980425/SN 1998bw revealed that long gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are physically associated with broad-lined type-Ic supernovae (SNe). Since then more than 1000 long GRBs have been localized to high angular precision, but only in similar to 50 cases has the underlying SN component been identified. Using the Gamma-Ray Burst Optical Near-Infrared Detector (GROND) multi-channel imager at ESO/La Silla, during the last ten years we have devoted a substantial amount of observing time to reveal and study SN components in long-GRB afterglows. Here we report on four more GRB SNe (associated with GRBs 071112C, 111228A, 120714B, and 130831A) which were discovered and/or followed-up with GROND and whose redshifts lie between z = 0.4 and 0.8. We study their afterglow light curves, follow the associated SN bumps over several weeks, and characterize their host galaxies. Using SN 1998bw as a template, the derived SN explosion parameters are fully consistent with the corresponding properties of the currently known GRB-SN ensemble, with no evidence for an evolution of their properties as a function of redshift. In two cases (GRB 120714B/SN 2012eb at z = 0.398 and GRB 130831A/SN 2013fu at z = 0.479) additional Very Large Telescope (VLT) spectroscopy of the associated SNe revealed a photospheric expansion velocity at maximum light of about 40 000 and 20 000 km s(-1), respectively. For GRB 120714B, which was an intermediate-luminosity burst, we find additional evidence for a black-body component in the light of the optical transient at early times, similar to what has been detected in some GRB SNe at lower redshifts.

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