HI and CO spectroscopy of the unusual host of GRB 171205A: A grand design spiral galaxy with a distorted HI field
GRBs produced by the collapse of massive stars are usually found near the most prominent star-forming regions of star-forming galaxies. GRB 171205A happened in the outskirts of a spiral galaxy, a peculiar location in an atypical GRB host. In this paper we present a highly-resolved study of the molec...
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Zusammenfassung: | GRBs produced by the collapse of massive stars are usually found near the
most prominent star-forming regions of star-forming galaxies. GRB 171205A
happened in the outskirts of a spiral galaxy, a peculiar location in an
atypical GRB host. In this paper we present a highly-resolved study of the
molecular gas of this host, with CO(1-0) observations from ALMA. We compare
with GMRT atomic HI observations, and with data at other wavelengths to provide
a broad-band view of the galaxy. The ALMA observations have a spatial
resolution of 0.2" and a spectral resolution of 10 km/s, observed when the
afterglow had a flux density of ~53 mJy. This allowed a molecular study both in
emission and absorption. The HI observations allowed to study the host galaxy
and its extended environment. The CO emission shows an undisturbed spiral
structure with a central bar, and no significant emission at the location of
the GRB. Our CO spectrum does not reveal any CO absorption, with a column
density limit of < 10^15 cm^-2. This argues against the progenitor forming in a
massive molecular cloud. The molecular gas traces the galaxy arms with higher
concentration in the regions dominated by dust. The HI gas does not follow the
stellar light or the molecular gas and is concentrated in two blobs, with no
emission towards the centre of the galaxy, and is slightly displaced towards
the southwest of the galaxy, where the GRB exploded. Within the extended
neighbourhood of the host galaxy, we identify another prominent HI source at
the same redshift, at a projected distance of 188 kpc. Our observations show
that the progenitor of this GRB is not associated to a massive molecular cloud,
but more likely related to low-metallicity atomic gas. The distortion in the HI
gas field is indicator of an odd environment that could have triggered star
formation and could be linked to a past interaction with the companion galaxy. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2406.16726 |