The peculiar nature of the host galaxy of the low-luminosity GRB 100316D has
baffled the astronomers since its first detection. The low distance,
$z=0.0591$, of GRB 100316D and its association with SN 2010bh represent two
important motivations for studying this host galaxy and the GRB's immediate
environment with the high spatial resolution provided by the VLT/MUSE. Its
large field-of-view allows us to create 2D maps of gas metallicity, ionization
level and the star-formation rate distribution maps. Based on these, we derive
that the GRB exploded in the most active star-forming region of the galaxy,
characterized by a low metallicity and a young stellar population. We conclude
that the host is a late-type dwarf galaxy characterized by the presence of
multiple star-forming regions and an extended central region with on-going
shock interactions. The galaxy likely experienced a relatively recent
gravitational encounter, that also triggered an intense burst of star-formation
5-15 Myr ago, generating a massive stellar population (including stars with
masses up to 20 -- 40 $M_ødot$) at the GRB site.
Description
[1704.05509] The MUSE view of the host galaxy of GRB 100316D
%0 Generic
%1 izzo2017galaxy
%A Izzo, L.
%A Thöne, C. C.
%A Schulze, S.
%A Mehner, A.
%A Flores, H.
%A Cano, Z.
%A Postigo, A. de Ugarte
%A Kann, D. A.
%A Amorìn, R.
%A Anderson, J.
%A Bauer, F. E.
%A Bensch, K.
%A Christensen, L.
%A Covino, S.
%A Della Valle, M.
%A Fynbo, J. P. U.
%A Jakobsson, P.
%A Klose, S.
%A Kuncarayakti, H.
%A Leloudas, G.
%A Milvang-Jensen, B.
%A Möller, P.
%A Puech, M.
%A Rossi, A.
%A Sànchez-Ramìrez, R.
%A Vergani, S. D.
%D 2017
%K grb host muse
%T The MUSE view of the host galaxy of GRB 100316D
%U http://arxiv.org/abs/1704.05509
%X The peculiar nature of the host galaxy of the low-luminosity GRB 100316D has
baffled the astronomers since its first detection. The low distance,
$z=0.0591$, of GRB 100316D and its association with SN 2010bh represent two
important motivations for studying this host galaxy and the GRB's immediate
environment with the high spatial resolution provided by the VLT/MUSE. Its
large field-of-view allows us to create 2D maps of gas metallicity, ionization
level and the star-formation rate distribution maps. Based on these, we derive
that the GRB exploded in the most active star-forming region of the galaxy,
characterized by a low metallicity and a young stellar population. We conclude
that the host is a late-type dwarf galaxy characterized by the presence of
multiple star-forming regions and an extended central region with on-going
shock interactions. The galaxy likely experienced a relatively recent
gravitational encounter, that also triggered an intense burst of star-formation
5-15 Myr ago, generating a massive stellar population (including stars with
masses up to 20 -- 40 $M_ødot$) at the GRB site.
@misc{izzo2017galaxy,
abstract = {The peculiar nature of the host galaxy of the low-luminosity GRB 100316D has
baffled the astronomers since its first detection. The low distance,
$z=0.0591$, of GRB 100316D and its association with SN 2010bh represent two
important motivations for studying this host galaxy and the GRB's immediate
environment with the high spatial resolution provided by the VLT/MUSE. Its
large field-of-view allows us to create 2D maps of gas metallicity, ionization
level and the star-formation rate distribution maps. Based on these, we derive
that the GRB exploded in the most active star-forming region of the galaxy,
characterized by a low metallicity and a young stellar population. We conclude
that the host is a late-type dwarf galaxy characterized by the presence of
multiple star-forming regions and an extended central region with on-going
shock interactions. The galaxy likely experienced a relatively recent
gravitational encounter, that also triggered an intense burst of star-formation
5-15 Myr ago, generating a massive stellar population (including stars with
masses up to 20 -- 40 $M_{\odot}$) at the GRB site.},
added-at = {2017-04-20T10:20:39.000+0200},
author = {Izzo, L. and Thöne, C. C. and Schulze, S. and Mehner, A. and Flores, H. and Cano, Z. and Postigo, A. de Ugarte and Kann, D. A. and Amorìn, R. and Anderson, J. and Bauer, F. E. and Bensch, K. and Christensen, L. and Covino, S. and Della Valle, M. and Fynbo, J. P. U. and Jakobsson, P. and Klose, S. and Kuncarayakti, H. and Leloudas, G. and Milvang-Jensen, B. and Möller, P. and Puech, M. and Rossi, A. and Sànchez-Ramìrez, R. and Vergani, S. D.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/25c34622a096f330056d5f8d91215c3ad/miki},
description = {[1704.05509] The MUSE view of the host galaxy of GRB 100316D},
interhash = {cbb20f0ef159aae16f55562b3e1cc609},
intrahash = {5c34622a096f330056d5f8d91215c3ad},
keywords = {grb host muse},
note = {cite arxiv:1704.05509Comment: 20 pages, 17 figures, 6 tables. Submitted to MNRAS},
timestamp = {2017-04-20T10:20:39.000+0200},
title = {The MUSE view of the host galaxy of GRB 100316D},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/1704.05509},
year = 2017
}