A Radio Flare in the Long-lived Afterglow of the Distant Short GRB 210726A: Energy Injection or a Reverse Shock from Shell Collisions?

Author:

Schroeder GenevieveORCID,Rhodes LaurenORCID,Laskar TanmoyORCID,Nugent AnyaORCID,Rouco Escorial AliciaORCID,Rastinejad Jillian C.ORCID,Fong Wen-faiORCID,van der Horst Alexander J.ORCID,Veres PéterORCID,Alexander Kate D.ORCID,Andersson AlexORCID,Berger EdoORCID,Blanchard Peter K.ORCID,Chastain SarahORCID,Christensen LiseORCID,Fender Rob,Green David A.ORCID,Groot PaulORCID,Heywood IanORCID,Horesh AssafORCID,Izzo LucaORCID,Kilpatrick Charles D.ORCID,Körding Elmar,Lien AmyORCID,Malesani Daniele B.ORCID,McBride VanessaORCID,Mooley KunalORCID,Rowlinson AntoniaORCID,Sears HueiORCID,Stappers BenORCID,Tanvir NialORCID,Vergani Susanna D.ORCID,Wijers Ralph A. M. J.ORCID,Williams-Baldwin DavidORCID,Woudt PatrickORCID

Abstract

Abstract We present the discovery of the radio afterglow of the short gamma-ray burst (GRB) 210726A, localized to a galaxy at a photometric redshift of z ∼ 2.4. While radio observations commenced ≲1 day after the burst, no radio emission was detected until ∼11 days. The radio afterglow subsequently brightened by a factor of ∼3 in the span of a week, followed by a rapid decay (a “radio flare”). We find that a forward shock afterglow model cannot self-consistently describe the multiwavelength X-ray and radio data, and underpredicts the flux of the radio flare by a factor of ≈5. We find that the addition of substantial energy injection, which increases the isotropic kinetic energy of the burst by a factor of ≈4, or a reverse shock from a shell collision are viable solutions to match the broadband behavior. At z ∼ 2.4, GRB 210726A is among the highest-redshift short GRBs discovered to date, as well as the most luminous in radio and X-rays. Combining and comparing all previous radio afterglow observations of short GRBs, we find that the majority of published radio searches conclude by ≲10 days after the burst, potentially missing these late-rising, luminous radio afterglows.

Funder

NSF

Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

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