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Long gamma-ray bursts and core-collapse supernovae have different environments
Authors:Fruchter A S  Levan A J  Strolger L  Vreeswijk P M  Thorsett S E  Bersier D  Burud I  Castro Cerón J M  Castro-Tirado A J  Conselice C  Dahlen T  Ferguson H C  Fynbo J P U  Garnavich P M  Gibbons R A  Gorosabel J  Gull T R  Hjorth J  Holland S T  Kouveliotou C  Levay Z  Livio M  Metzger M R  Nugent P E  Petro L  Pian E  Rhoads J E  Riess A G  Sahu K C  Smette A  Tanvir N R  Wijers R A M J  Woosley S E
Institution:Space Telescope Science Institute, 3700 San Martin Drive, Baltimore, Maryland 21218, USA. fruchter@stsci.edu
Abstract:When massive stars exhaust their fuel, they collapse and often produce the extraordinarily bright explosions known as core-collapse supernovae. On occasion, this stellar collapse also powers an even more brilliant relativistic explosion known as a long-duration gamma-ray burst. One would then expect that these long gamma-ray bursts and core-collapse supernovae should be found in similar galactic environments. Here we show that this expectation is wrong. We find that the gamma-ray bursts are far more concentrated in the very brightest regions of their host galaxies than are the core-collapse supernovae. Furthermore, the host galaxies of the long gamma-ray bursts are significantly fainter and more irregular than the hosts of the core-collapse supernovae. Together these results suggest that long-duration gamma-ray bursts are associated with the most extremely massive stars and may be restricted to galaxies of limited chemical evolution. Our results directly imply that long gamma-ray bursts are relatively rare in galaxies such as our own Milky Way.
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