Abstract

We present optical and near-IR observations of the host galaxy of GRB 020127, for which we measure R-K=6.2 mag. This is only the second GRB host to date, which is classified as an ERO. The spectral energy distribution is typical of a dusty starburst galaxy, with a redshift, z~1.9, a luminosity, L~5L*, and an inferred stellar mass of ~10^11-10^12 Msun, two orders of magnitude more massive than typical GRB hosts. A comparison to the z~2 mass-metallicity (M-Z) relation indicates that the host metallicity is about 0.5 Zsun. This result shows that at least some GRBs occur in massive, metal-enriched galaxies, and that the proposed low metallicity bias of GRB progenitors is not as severe as previously claimed. Instead we propose that the blue colors and sub-L* luminosities of most GRB hosts reflect their young starburst populations. This, along with the locally increased fraction of starbursts at lower stellar mass, may in fact be the underlying reason for the claimed low metallicity bias of z<0.2 GRB hosts. Consequently, GRBs and their host galaxies may serve as a reliable tracer of cosmic star formation, particularly at z>1 where the M-Z relation is systematically lower, and the star formation rate is dominated by sub-L* galaxies.

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