Multiwavelength properties of short gamma ray bursts with extended emission observed by Swift
Abstract
Short gamma-ray bursts with extended emission (SGRBEEs) are a particular class of long GRBs (LGRBs) which, despite their duration, share several observational features with short GRBs (SGRBs). They are composed by a short, hard initial pulse (IP) followed by a longer and softer extended emission (EE). We investigate whether SGRBEEs originate from the same progenitor as SGRBs despite their duration, representing a peculiar subclass of LGRBs, or if they constitute a distinct population. Given their respective duration, we tested if the IP and the EE share properties with short and long GRBs, respectively. We analysed SGRBEEs from the flux-limited, redshift-complete SBAT4 sample using prompt-emission data from Swift/BAT, Fermi/GBM and Konus-WIND, and X-ray afterglow observations from Swift/XRT. The temporal and spectral properties of the IP and EE components were compared with those of SGRBs from the extended SBAT4 sample and LGRBs from the BAT6 sample. Despite observing a clear spectral evolution during the prompt phase of each SGRBEE, IPs and EEs as well as short and long GRBs can not be distinguished by their hardness ratio only. All bursts analysed have a spectral lag consistent with zero. SGRBEEs XRT light curves are consistently more complex than those of SGRBs, requiring the addition of multiple breaks and showing the presence of steep decays and plateaus. Our results indicate that SGRBEEs are not an intermediate class. During prompt emission, despite common spectral features, IPs and EEs temporally differ from short and long GRBs, respectively. EEs are on average too faint to appear in the Amati plane, but IPs occupy the same parameter space of SGRBs. In the afterglow, SGRBEEs are more luminous than standard GRBs at early-time, suggesting a direct contribution from the EE; at later times, these events behave as standard SGRBs, and both remain systematically less luminous than LGRBs.
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