Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) have been phenomenologically classified into long and short populations based on whether the observed duration is longer or shorter than two seconds 1 .Multi-wavelength and multi-messenger observations in recent years have revealed that in general long GRBs originate from massive star core collapse events 2 , whereas short GRBs originate from binary neutron star mergers 3 . It has been known that the duration criterion is sometimes unreliable, and multi-wavelength criteria are needed to identify the physical origin of a particular GRB 4 . Some apparently long GRBs have been suggested to have a neutron star merger origin 5 , whereas some apparently short GRBs have been attributed to genuinely long GRBs 6 whose short, bright emission is above the detector's sensitivity threshold. Still, there has been no known case that a GRB is genuinely short but originates from death of a massive star. Here we report the comprehensive analysis of the multi-wavelength data of a bright short GRB 200826A. This burst has a sharp 1-second spike, which is not part of an underlying long-duration event. Its other observational properties are, however,
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