GRB 210704A at z=2.34 shows a luminous fast blue transient excess peaking at ~7 days, modeled as refreshed shock emission and linked to LFBOTs alongside a high-Lorentz-factor jet.
A., Schady, P., Olivares, E
3 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
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Late-time JWST/NIRCam data on GRB 250702B show a high-mass dusty host and possible ~3-sigma transient detections in two bands suggesting light-curve flattening.
The paper identifies supernova emission matching a scaled SN 1998bw template in the late-time light curve of EP250302a at z=1.131, with early data constraining the jet Lorentz factor above 25.
citing papers explorer
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GRB 210704A: A Luminous Fast Blue Transient in a GRB Afterglow at $z = 2.34$
GRB 210704A at z=2.34 shows a luminous fast blue transient excess peaking at ~7 days, modeled as refreshed shock emission and linked to LFBOTs alongside a high-Lorentz-factor jet.
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Late-time JWST/NIRCam Observations of the Extremely Long-duration GRB 250702B/EP 250702a and Its Host Galaxy
Late-time JWST/NIRCam data on GRB 250702B show a high-mass dusty host and possible ~3-sigma transient detections in two bands suggesting light-curve flattening.
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Discovery of a Supernova Following the Einstein Probe Transient EP250302a at z = 1.131
The paper identifies supernova emission matching a scaled SN 1998bw template in the late-time light curve of EP250302a at z=1.131, with early data constraining the jet Lorentz factor above 25.