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      GRB 211227A as a Peculiar Long Gamma-Ray Burst from a Compact Star Merger

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          Abstract

          Long-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) associated with supernovae (SNe) are believed to originate from massive star core-collapse events, whereas short-duration GRBs that are related to compact star mergers are expected to be accompanied by kilonovae. GRB 211227A, which lasted about 84 s, had an initial short/hard spike followed by a series of soft gamma-ray extended emission at redshift z = 0.228. We performed follow-up observations of the optical emission using BOOTES, LCOGT, and the Lijiang 2.4 m telescope, but we detected no associated supernova signature, even down to very stringent limits at such a low redshift. We observed the host galaxy within a large error circle and roughly estimated the physical offset of GRB 211227A as 20.47 ± 14.47 kpc from the galaxy center. These properties are similar to those of GRB 060614, and suggest that the progenitor of GRB 211227A is not favored to be associated with the death of massive stars. Hence, we propose that GRB 211227A originates from a compact star merger. Calculating pseudo-kilonova emission for this case by adopting the typical parameters, we find that any associated pseudo-kilonova is too faint to be detected. If this is the case, it explains naturally the characteristics of the prompt emission, the lack of SN and kilonova emission, and the large physical offset from the galaxy center.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                The Astrophysical Journal Letters
                ApJL
                American Astronomical Society
                2041-8205
                2041-8213
                May 30 2022
                June 01 2022
                May 30 2022
                June 01 2022
                : 931
                : 2
                : L23
                Article
                10.3847/2041-8213/ac6e3a
                2d4c14f0-15ba-4dbd-a7f5-7f43daed1bed
                © 2022

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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