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The number of supernovae known to be connected with long-duration gamma-ray bursts is increasing and the link between these events is no longer exclusively found at low redshift ($z lesssim 0.3$) but is well established also at larger distances. We present a new case of such a liaison at $z = 0.33$ between GRB,171010A and SN,2017htp. It is the second closest GRB with an associated supernova of only three events detected by Fermi-LAT. The supernova is one of the few higher redshift cases where spectroscopic observations were possible and shows spectral similarities with the well-studied SN,1998bw, having produced a similar Ni mass ($M_{rm Ni}=0.33pm0.02 ~rm{M_{odot}}$) with slightly lower ejected mass ($M_{rm ej}=4.1pm0.7~rm{M_{odot}}$) and kinetic energy ($E_{rm K} = 8.1pm2.5 times 10^{51} ~rm{erg}$). The host-galaxy is bigger in size than typical GRB host galaxies, but the analysis of the region hosting the GRB revealed spectral properties typically observed in GRB hosts and showed that the progenitor of this event was located in a very bright HII region of its face-on host galaxy, at a projected distance of $sim$ 10 kpc from its galactic centre. The star-formation rate (SFR$_{GRB} sim$ 0.2 M$_{odot}$~yr$^{-1}$) and metallicity (12 + log(O/H) $sim 8.15 pm 0.10$) of the GRB star-forming region are consistent with those of the host galaxies of previously studied GRB-SN systems.
We present optical and near-infrared (NIR) photometry for three gamma-ray burst supernovae (GRB-SNe): GRB 120729A, GRB 130215A / SN 2013ez and GRB 130831A / SN 2013fu. In the case of GRB 130215A / SN 2013ez, we also present optical spectroscopy at t-
On 2018 July 28, GRB 180728A triggered textit{Swift} satellites and, soon after the determination of the redshift, we identified this source as a type II binary-driven hypernova (BdHN II) in our model. Consequently, we predicted the appearance time o
We report observations and analysis of the nearby gamma-ray burst GRB,161219B (redshift $z=0.1475$) and the associated Type Ic supernova (SN) 2016jca. GRB,161219B had an isotropic gamma-ray energy of $sim 1.6 times 10^{50}$,erg. Its afterglow is like
We present observations of the dark Gamma-Ray Burst GRB 051008 provided by Swift/BAT, Swift/XRT, Konus-WIND, INTEGRAL/SPI-ACS in the high-energy domain and the Shajn, Swift/UVOT, Tautenburg, NOT, Gemini and Keck I telescopes in the optical and near-i
Every GRB model where the progenitor is assumed to be a highly relativistic hadronic jet whose pions, muons and electron pair secondaries are feeding the gamma jets engine, necessarily (except for very fine-tuned cases) leads to a high average neutri