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Featured researches published by K. E. Heintz.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018

Mass and metallicity scaling relations of high-redshift star-forming galaxies selected by GRBs

M. Arabsalmani; P. Møller; Daniel A. Perley; W. Freudling; Johan Peter Uldall Fynbo; E. L. Floc'h; M. A. Zwaan; S. Schulze; Nial R. Tanvir; Lise Christensen; Andrew J. Levan; P. Jakobsson; Daniele Malesani; Z. Cano; S. Covino; Valerio D'Elia; Paolo Goldoni; Andreja Gomboc; K. E. Heintz; M. Sparre; Antonio de Ugarte Postigo; S. D. Vergani

We present a comprehensive study of the relations between gas kinematics, metallicity and stellar mass in a sample of 82 gamma-ray burst (GRB)-selected galaxies using absorption and emission methods. We find the velocity widths of both emission and absorption profiles to be a proxy of stellar mass. We also investigate the velocity–metallicity correlation and its evolution with redshift. Using 33 GRB hosts with measured stellar mass and metallicity, we study the mass–metallicity relation for GRB host galaxies in a stellar mass range of 108.2–1011.1 M⊙ and a redshift range of z ∼ 0.3–3.4. The GRB-selected galaxies appear to track the mass–metallicity relation of star-forming galaxies but with an offset of 0.15 towards lower metallicities. This offset is comparable with the average error bar on the metallicity measurements of the GRB sample and also the scatter on the mass–metallicity relation of the general population. It is hard to decide whether this relatively small offset is due to systematic effects or the intrinsic nature of GRB hosts. We also investigate the possibility of using absorption-line metallicity measurements of GRB hosts to study the mass–metallicity relation at high redshifts. Our analysis shows that the metallicity measurements from absorption methods can significantly differ from emission metallicities and assuming identical measurements from the two methods may result in erroneous conclusions.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017

GRB 161219B/SN 2016jca: A low-redshift gamma-ray burst supernova powered by radioactive heating

Z. Cano; L. Izzo; A. de Ugarte Postigo; Christina C. Thoene; T. Kruehler; K. E. Heintz; Daniele Malesani; S. Geier; C. Fuentes; T.-W. Chen; S. Covino; Valerio D'Elia; J. P. U. Fynbo; Paolo Goldoni; Andreja Gomboc; J. Hjorth; P. Jakobsson; D. A. Kann; B. Milvang-Jensen; G. Pugliese; R. Sánchez-Ramírez; S. Schulze; Jesper Sollerman; Nial R. Tanvir; K. Wiersema

Since the first discovery of a broad-lined type Ic supernova (SN) with a long-duration gamma-ray burst (GRB) in 1998, fewer than fifty GRB-supernovae (SNe) have been discovered. The intermediate-luminosity Swift GRB 161219B and its associated supernova SN 2016jca, which occurred at a redshift of z = 0.1475, represents only the seventh GRB-SN to have been discovered within 1 Gpc, and hence provides an excellent opportunity to investigate the observational and physical properties of these very elusive and rare type of SN. As such, we present optical to near-infrared photometry and optical spectroscopy of GRB 161219B and SN 2016jca, spanning the first three months since its discovery. GRB 161219B exploded in the disk of an edge-on spiral galaxy at a projected distance of 3.4 kpc from the galactic centre. GRB 161219B itself is an outlier in the E p,i − E γ, iso plane, while SN 2016jca had a rest-frame, peak absolute V -band magnitude of M V = − 19.0 ± 0.1, which it reached after 12.3 ± 0.7 rest-frame days. We find that the bolometric properties of SN 2016jca are inconsistent with being powered solely by a magnetar central engine, and demonstrate that it was likely powered exclusively by energy deposited by the radioactive decay of nickel and cobalt into their daughter products, which were nucleosynthesised when its progenitor underwent core collapse. We find that 0.22 ± 0.08 M ⊙ of nickel is required to reproducethe peak luminosity of SN 2016jca, and we constrain an ejecta mass of 5.8 ± 0.3 M ⊙ and a kinetic energy of 5.1 ± 0.8 × 10 52 erg. Finally, we report on a chromatic, pre-maximum bump in the g -band light curve, and discuss its possible origin.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018

The host galaxy of the short GRB 111117A at z = 2.211: Impact on the short GRB redshift distribution and progenitor channels⋆⋆⋆

J. Selsing; T. Krühler; Daniele Malesani; P. D’Avanzo; S. Schulze; S. D. Vergani; J. T. Palmerio; J. Japelj; B. Milvang-Jensen; D. Watson; P. Jakobsson; J. Bolmer; Z. Cano; S. Covino; V. D’Elia; A. de Ugarte Postigo; J. P. U. Fynbo; Andreja Gomboc; K. E. Heintz; L. Kaper; Andrew J. Levan; S. Piranomonte; G. Pugliese; R. Sánchez-Ramírez; M. Sparre; Nial R. Tanvir; C. C. Thöne; K. Wiersema

We thank the anonymous referee for the constructive report. We thank Jens Hjorth and Lise Christensen for useful discussions regarding the interpretation of this event. We thank Mathieu Puech for testing the possible contribution from an older stellar population in the SED. We thank Peter Laursen for fruitful discussions regarding the Ly alpha escape fraction. TK acknowledges support through the Sofja Kovalevskaja Award to P. Schady. SDV is supported by the French National Research Agency (ANR) under contract ANR-16-CE31-0003 BEaPro. PDA and SCo acknowledge support from ASI grant I/004/11/3. JJ acknowledges support from NOVA and a NWO-FAPESP grant for advanced instrumentation in astronomy. NRT and KW acknowledge support from STFC Consolidated Grant ST/N000757/1. CT acknowledges support from a Spanish National Research Grant of Excellence under project AYA 2014-58381-P and funding associated with a Ramon y Cajal fellowship under grant number RyC-2012-09984. AdUP acknowledges support from a Ramon y Cajal fellowship, a BBVA Foundation Grant for Researchers and Cultural Creators, and the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness through project AYA2014-58381-P. ZC acknowledges support from the Spanish research project AYA 2014-58381-P and support from Juan de la Cierva Incorporacion fellowships IJCI-2014-21669. RSR acknowledges AdUPs BBVA Foundation Grant for Researchers and Cultural Creators and support from the Italian Space Agency (ASI) through Contract n. 2015-046-R.0 and from the European Union Horizon 2020 Programme under the AHEAD project (grant agreement n. 654215). This research made use of Astropy, a community-developed core Python package for Astronomy (Astropy Collaboration et al. 2013). The analysis and plotting was achieved using the Python-based packages Matplotlib (Hunter 2007), Numpy, and Scipy (van der Walt et al. 2011), along with other community-developed packages. This work made use of observations obtained with the Italian 3.6m Telescopio Nazionale Galileo (TNG) operated on the island of La Palma by the Fundacion Galileo Galilei of the INAF (Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica) at the Spanish Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos of the Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias. Based on data from the GTC Archive at CAB (INTA-CSIC) and on observations obtained at the Gemini Observatory, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under a cooperative agreement with the NSF on behalf of the Gemini partnership: the National Science Foundation (United States), the National Research Council (Canada), CONICYT (Chile), Ministerio de Ciencia, Tecnologia e Innovacion Productiva (Argentina), and Ministerio da Ciencia, Tecnologia e Inovacao (Brazil).


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017

Steep extinction towards GRB 140506A reconciled from host galaxy observations: Evidence that steep reddening laws are local

K. E. Heintz; J. P. U. Fynbo; P. Jakobsson; T. Krühler; Lise Christensen; D. Watson; C. Ledoux; P. Noterdaeme; Daniel A. Perley; H. Rhodin; J. Selsing; S. Schulze; Nial R. Tanvir; P. Møller; Paolo Goldoni; D. Xu; B. Milvang-Jensen

KEH and PJ acknowledge support by a Project Grant (162948–051) from The Icelandic Research Fund. The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Research Council under the European Union’s Seventh Framework Program (FP7/2007–2013)/ERC Grant agreement no. EGGS–278202. TK acknowledges support through the Sofja Kovalevskaja Award to P. Schady from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation of Germany. LC is supported by YDUN grant DFF – 4090–00079. D.X. acknowledges the support by the One-Hundred-Talent Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), by the Strategic Priority Research Program “Multi-wavelength Gravitational Wave Universe” of the CAS (No. XDB23000000), and by the National Natural Science Foundation of China under grant 11533003.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017

Solving the conundrum of intervening strong Mg II absorbers towards gamma-ray bursts and quasars

L. Christensen; S. D. Vergani; S. Schulze; N. Annau; J. Selsing; J. P. U. Fynbo; A. de Ugarte Postigo; R. Cañameras; S. Lopez; D. Passi; P. Cortés-Zuleta; Sara L. Ellison; V. D’Odorico; G. Becker; T. A. M. Berg; Z. Cano; S. Covino; G. Cupani; V. D’Elia; Paolo Goldoni; Andreja Gomboc; F. Hammer; K. E. Heintz; P. Jakobsson; J. Japelj; L. Kaper; Daniele Malesani; P. Møller; Patrick Petitjean; V. Pugliese

Previous studies have shown that the incidence rate of intervening strong MgII absorbers towards GRBs were a factor of 2 - 4 higher than towards quasars. Exploring the similar sized and uniformly selected legacy data sets XQ-100 and XSGRB, each consisting of 100 quasar and 81 GRB afterglow spectra obtained with a single instrument (VLT/X-shooter), we demonstrate that there is no disagreement in the number density of strong MgII absorbers with rest-frame equivalent widths


The Astrophysical Journal | 2018

The properties of GRB 120923A at a spectroscopic redshift of z=7.8

Nial R. Tanvir; M. Bremer; S. B. Cenko; G. Pugliese; James E. Rhoads; T. Kruehler; Paolo Goldoni; Andrew S. Fruchter; Andrew J. Levan; K. E. Heintz; S. Schulze; Daniel A. Perley; Kuntal Misra; Elizabeth R. Stanway; A. Cucchiara; J. Hjorth; Tanmoy Laskar; D. Xu; A. de Ugarte Postigo; F. Knust; S. Covino; William. Fong; Sylvio Klose; Valerio D'Elia; J. P. U. Fynbo; Z. Cano; Daniele Malesani; Bethany Elisa Cobb; R.A.M.J. Wijers; D. Watson

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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018

ALMA observations of a metal-rich damped Ly α absorber at z = 2.5832: evidence for strong galactic winds in a galaxy group

J. P. U. Fynbo; K. E. Heintz; Marcel Neeleman; Lise Christensen; Miroslava Dessauges-Zavadsky; Nissim Kanekar; P. Møller; Jason X. Prochaska; N. H. P. Rhodin; M. A. Zwaan

1 {\AA} towards GRBs and quasars in the redshift range 0.1 < z < 5. With large and similar sample sizes, and path length coverages of


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018

Highly-ionized metals as probes of the circumburst gas in the natal regions of gamma-ray bursts

K. E. Heintz; C. C. Thöne; J.-K. Krogager; J. Selsing; V. D'Elia; J. Japelj; P. Jakobsson; Z. Cano; Andreja Gomboc; Johan Peter Uldall Fynbo; M. Sparre; M. Arabsalmani; Nial R. Tanvir; S. Covino; J. Bolmer; D. Watson; R. Sánchez-Ramírez; A. de Ugarte Postigo; S. D. Vergani; L. Kaper; G. Pugliese

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The Astrophysical Journal | 2018

The 2175 Å extinction feature in the optical afterglow spectrum of GRB 180325A at z = 2.25

T. Zafar; K. E. Heintz; J. P. U. Fynbo; Daniele Malesani; J. Bolmer; C. Ledoux; M. Arabsalmani; L. Kaper; Sergio Campana; Rhaana L. C. Starling; J. Selsing; D. A. Kann; Antonio de Ugarte Postigo; T. Schweyer; L. Christensen; P. Møller; J. Japelj; Daniel A. Perley; Nial R. Tanvir; Paolo D'Avanzo; Dieter H. Hartmann; J. Hjorth; S. Covino; B. Sbarufatti; P. Jakobsson; L. Izzo; R. Salvaterra; Valerio D'Elia; D. Xu

z = 57.8 and 254.4 for GRBs and quasars, respectively, the incidences of intervening absorbers are consistent within 1 sigma uncertainty levels at all redshifts. For absorbers at z < 2.3 the incidence towards GRBs is a factor of 1.5


arXiv: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena | 2018

The X-shooter GRB afterglow legacy sample (XS-GRB)

J. Selsing; Daniele Malesani; Paolo Goldoni; J. P. U. Fynbo; T. Krühler; L. A. Antonelli; M. Arabsalmani; J. Bolmer; Z. Cano; L. Christensen; S. Covino; Paolo D'Avanzo; Valerio D'Elia; A. De Cia; A. de Ugarte Postigo; H. Flores; M. Friis; Andreja Gomboc; J. Greiner; P. Groot; F. Hammer; O. E. Hartoog; K. E. Heintz; J. Hjorth; P. Jakobsson; J. Japelj; D. A. Kann; L. Kaper; C. Ledoux; G. Leloudas

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J. P. U. Fynbo

University of Copenhagen

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J. Selsing

University of Copenhagen

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Z. Cano

Spanish National Research Council

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Andreja Gomboc

University of Nova Gorica

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A. de Ugarte Postigo

Spanish National Research Council

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P. Møller

European Southern Observatory

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