GRB 000301C
GCN Circular 568
Subject
GRB000301C: RXTE/ASM and IPN localizations
Date
2000-03-02T19:25:31Z (25 years ago)
From
Don Smith at MIT <dasmith@space.mit.edu>
GRB000301C
D. A. Smith (MIT) reports on behalf of the ASM team at MIT and
NASA/GSFC, and K. Hurley (UCB) and T. Cline (NASA/GSFC) report on
behalf of the Ulysses and NEAR GRB teams:
The ASM has detected a GRB at 03/01/2000 09:51:37 (UTC). The burst
showed a single peak with a simple fast-rise, slow-decay structure.
The three ASM energy channels showed the strongest response in the
5-12 keV band, reaching a peak flux of 3.7+-0.7 Crab (5-12 keV) in 1-s
time bins. The event lasted approximately 10 seconds. The event was
detected by a single ASM SSC, yielding an error box (90% confidence,
including systematic and statistical error) 4.2 degrees long and 8.7
arcminutes wide, centered at R.A. = 16h 13m 14s and Decl. = 28o 37'
59.2" (J2000.0), with a position angle of -117.1 degrees.
Ulysses and NEAR observed this burst. Preliminary triangulation gives
an annulus 5' in full-width (3 sigma), centered at R.A. = 20h 34m
7.56s and Decl. = 20o 32' 19.62s (J2000.0), with a central radius of
57.520 degrees. This annulus may be refined.
This annulus intersects the ASM error box at near-right angles to
create a composite localization of a parallelogram of area ~50
sq. arcmin with the following corners (J2000.0):
R.A. Decl.
16h 20m 30s +29o 30' 14.3"
16h 20m 08s +29o 27' 50.4"
16h 20m 13s +29o 19' 40.8"
16h 20m 35s +29o 22' 00.0"
Figures and charts can be found at
http://gx339.mit.edu/grb000301c/
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 570
Subject
GRB 000301C : Optical Candidate
Date
2000-03-03T08:05:32Z (25 years ago)
From
Brian Lindgren Jensen at U.of Copenhagen <brian_j@astro.ku.dk>
J. P. U. Fynbo (U. Of Aarhus),
B. L. Jensen, J. Hjorth, H. Pedersen (U. of Copenhagen) and
J. Gorosabel (DSRI, Copenhagen)
on behalf of a larger European GRB Consortium report:
"Using the ALFOSC on the 2.5m Nordic Optical Telescope, we have
obtained I, R, B, and U-band imaging of the field of GRB 000301C
(Smith et al., GCN #568) on 2000 March 3.14-3.28 UT. Comparing with
DSS-2
plates we find an object which is notoriously absent from DSS-2
(red) and (blue).
The coordinates of this object are:
RA(J2000) : 16 20 18.6
Dec(J2000) : +29 26 36
(with an uncertainty of about 1")
This object is detected in individual exposures of 900s,
in all four colors.
Preliminary USNO-A1.0-based magnitude is: R~20.3 +- 0.5 .
The object appears bluer than most GRB OTs observed so far.
Sections of the images will be made available at:
http://www.astro.ku.dk/~brian_j/grb/grb000301c
along with a DSS-2 finding chart."
[GCN OPS NOTE (03Mar00 14:15 UT): The URL in the original posting
of this circular had an error. This archived copy of the circular
has been corrected.]
GCN Circular 571
Subject
GRB000301C
Date
2000-03-03T09:54:49Z (25 years ago)
From
Adriano Guarnieri at O.A.di Bologna <adriano@astbo3.bo.astro.it>
S.Bernabei, S.Marinoni, C.Bartolini, A.Guarnieri, A.Piccioni,
Astronomical Observatory and Astronomy Department, Bologna University, and
N.Masetti, ITeSRE-CNR, Bologna report:
"A preliminary quick inspection of one single R image of the field of
GRB 000301C (RXTE/ASM and IPN localization, Smith, Hurley and Cline, GCN 568)
taken on March 3, starting at 04:27 UT (EEV-CCD,1000 sec exposure) with the
152 cm telescope of Loiano shows an object located at RA=16h 20m 18.5s,
D=29`26'35" (Eq. 2000), which is not present on the Digital Sky Survey.
It is roughly 1 mag brighter than the POSS limit and it is coincident with
the object detected by Fynbo et al., GCN 570.
Only new observation can decide if this object is the OT connected with
GRB 000301C.
This message may be cited
GCN Circular 572
Subject
GRB000301c, near-infrared observations
Date
2000-03-03T15:44:25Z (25 years ago)
From
Sylvio Klose at TLS Tautenburg <klose@tls-tautenburg.de>
B. Stecklum, S. Klose (Thueringer Landessternwarte Tautenburg),
O. Fischer (Universitaets-Sternwarte Jena),
C. Bailer-Jones, U. Thiele, A. Aguirre
(Max-Planck-Institut fuer Astronomie, Heidelberg),
F. J. Vrba, A. A. Henden, C. B. Luginbuhl,
B. Canzian, S. E. Levine, H. H. Guetter, J. A. Munn
(U.S. Naval Observatory, Flagstaff),
D. H. Hartmann (Clemson University, Clemson),
A. Castro-Tirado (LAEFF-INTA, Madrid, and IAA-CSIC, Granada),
J. Greiner (AIP Potsdam), and
J. Gorosabel (LAEFF-INTA, Madrid, and University of Amsterdam)
report:
The error box of the burst GRB 000301c reported by Smith et al. (GCN
#568) was imaged with the Calar Alto 3.5-m telescope on March 3, 4:41 UT
- 5:38 UT using the near-infrared camera Omega Cass. The frames
were taken in the course of a project whose goal is to measure the
degree of linear polarization of GRB afterglows. The limiting
magnitude of the K'-band image is about K'=19 after adding all images
taken at different position angles of the wire-grid polarizer.
The potential optical transient reported by Fynbo et al. (GCN #570) is
clearly detected. Based on the assumption that the B-R colour index of
the star USNO 125_07686794 is representative for its spectral type, a
preliminary estimate of the K'-band magnitude of the potential afterglow
of 17.4 was derived.
The image is posted on the Tautenburg Web page at
http://www.tls-tautenburg.de/research/grb000301c.html.
This message is quotable.
GCN Circular 573
Subject
GRB000301C, optical observations
Date
2000-03-03T19:17:14Z (25 years ago)
From
Peter Garnavich at Center for Astrophysics <peterg@mars.harvard.edu>
P. Garnavich (Notre Dame), P. Barmby, S. Jha, K. Stanek (CfA) report:
We imaged the ASM error box (GCN 568) of GRB000301C with the
FLWO 1.2m telescope and R-band filter on 2000 Mar. 3.51 (UT)
and detect the optical candidate reported by Fynbo et al. (GCN 570).
Using Landolt standards taken during the night, we find
a preliminary magnitude of R=20.28 +\- 0.05 mag. This is
very close to the Fynbo et al. estimate taken some 7 hours
earlier. However, given the quoted errors for the two measurements
there is room for some variability over this time. Further
observations are needed to confirm this source as the GRB
afterglow.
We have calibrated the following stars in R to use as comparisons:
star Offset East Offset North R
A -6" -1" 18.05 +/- 0.05
B -4 -89 18.48
C 70 -55 18.62
D -7 62 17.04
Offsets are in arcsec from the GRB candidate
with positive offsets east and north.
GCN Circular 575
Subject
GRB000301c optical observations
Date
2000-03-03T23:09:35Z (25 years ago)
From
Christian Veillet at CFHT <veillet@cfht.hawaii.edu>
Sorry...
I didn't use the right address for my posting! Just sent it to Scott...
Aloha
Christian
------------------------------
GRB000301c optical observations
The candidate for the optical transient (OT) associated with the gamma ray burst
GRB000301c has been observed in imaging mode with MOS on the 3.6-m CFH Telescope
in the course of the French GRB follow-up program at CFHT (M. Boer, CESR,
C. Veillet, CFHT).
Relative photometry in B and R with respect to the reference star A (GCN573)
is as following:
delta B = 1.29 +/- 0.05 2000 March 3.50 (UTC)
delta R = 2.19 +/- 0.05 2000 March 3.51 (UTC)
The R magnitude inferred from star A magnitude determination in GCN573
is 20.24 +/-.07, in good agreement with the GCN 573 value of R = 20.28 +\- 0.05
measured at the same epoch.
B and R images can be found at
http://www.cfht.hawaii.edu/~veillet/grb.html
B calibrations will be made tonight if no multicolor photometry is made
available
for reference stars in the field.
D. Elbaz and H. Flores are acknowledged for their help in these observations.
This message may be cited.
--
************************************************************
Dr. Christian Veillet, CFHT Senior Resident Astronomer
Phone: (808) 885-3161 http://www.cfht.hawaii.edu/~veillet/
************************************************************
GCN Circular 576
Subject
GRB 000301C: OT confirmed
Date
2000-03-03T23:21:41Z (25 years ago)
From
Brian Lindgren Jensen at U.of Copenhagen <brian_j@astro.ku.dk>
J. P. U. Fynbo (U. of Aarhus),
B. L. Jensen, J. Hjorth, H. Pedersen (U. of Copenhagen),
J. Gorosabel (DSRI, Copenhagen)
on behalf of a large European GRB Consortium report:
"In response to Garnevich et al., (GCN #573), we have
carried out photometry of stars A-D of GCN #573
and of the OT proposed by Fynbo et al., (GCN #570).
This photometry has been performed on our combined
2000, March 3, 3x900s NOT R-band image of the GRB-field.
Using the stars A-D of Garnevich et al.
as reference, we derive an R-band magnitude for the OT
at UT_mean = March 3.17 of R = 19.94+-0.04.
Hence, the candidate OT is fading and we thus propose
it as being the optical counterpart to GRB 000301C.
The implied power-law decay index from this magnitude
and the magnitude measured by Garnevich et al.
is rather steep : -1.8
(with this rate, a magnitude of R:20.8 is predicted for
March 4.17 UT)."
GCN Circular 577
Subject
GRB000301C, near-infrared observations (JHK' photometry)
Date
2000-03-03T23:39:15Z (25 years ago)
From
Naoto Kobayashi at SUBARU, NAOJ <naoto@naoj.org>
Naoto Kobayashi (Subaru Telescope, National Astronomical Observatory of Japan),
Miwa Goto, Hiroshi Terada (Kyoto University),
Alan T. Tokunaga (Institute for Astronomy, University of Hawaii),
on behalf of SUBARU Telescope team and SUBARU IRCS team
On 3 March, 12:48 UT - 13:54 UT, we observed the candidate optical
counterpart to GRB 000301C that was reported by Fynbo et al. (GCN
Circular #570). We used the Subaru 8m Telescope on Mauna kea with a
new instrument IRCS (Infrared Camera and Spectrograph for the Subaru
Telescope) during its first engineering run. Near-infrared J,H,K'
filters were used. The candidate optical transient (OT) was clearly
detected in all three bands.
We have performed preliminary photometry with 2-arcsecond aperture
using Persson standards taken during the night. The resultant magnitude
of the candidate OT was K'=17.6+-0.1 mag. For reference, the magnitude
of the near-by star, USNO 125_07686794, was estimated at K'=16.0+-0.05
mag.
Comparing to the estimated K' magnitude of 17.4 (at 4:41 UT - 5:38 UT)
reported by Stecklum et al (GCN Circular #572), our photometry may
suggest that the brightness decreased by roughly 0.2 mag during 8
hours. However, given the possible systematic errors for the two
estimates (e.g., photometric system is different), further
observations are necessary to confirm this OT candidate as the GRB
afterglow.
This message is quotable in publications.
GCN Circular 578
Subject
GRB 000301C, Optical Observation
Date
2000-03-04T01:33:27Z (25 years ago)
From
Jules Halpern at Columbia U. <jules@astro.columbia.edu>
J. P. Halpern, N. Mirabal, & S. Lawrence (Columbia U.) report
on behalf of the MDM Observatory GRB follow-up team:
"We imaged the location of GRB 000301C as determined by the
intersection of the RXTE All-Sky Monitor error box and the
Ulysses/NEAR annulus (Smith, Hurley, & Cline, GCN #568)
in the R band on March 3.51 UT using the MDM 1.3m telescope.
The optical transient found by Fynbo et al. (GCN #570,576)
is measured at R = 20.24 +/- 0.05, referenced to the comparison
stars of Garnavich et al. (GCN #573). This is consistent
with measurements by Garnavich et al. and Veillet (GCN #575)
that were obtained contemporaneously. The implied power-law
decay index is still rather uncertain. Using our magnitude
and that measured by Fynbo et al. (GCN #576), we find
alpha = -1.56 +/- 0.30. This predicts R = 20.90 +/- 0.18
on March 4.51 UT.
We measure the position of the optical transient to be
(J2000) RA 16:20:18.550, Dec +29:26:35.96 relative to
30 USNO-A2.0 stars having a dispersion of 0".31 in radius.
CCD images are posted at http://www.astro.bio2.edu/grb/
This message may be cited."
GCN Circular 579
Subject
GRB 000301C R-band observation
Date
2000-03-04T02:51:37Z (25 years ago)
From
Alberto Castro-Tirado at Inst.de Astro. de Andalucia <ajct@iaa.es>
Alberto J. Castro-Tirado, IAA-CSIC (Granada)
Holger Bock, Landesternwarte (Heidelberg)
Jochen Greiner, AIP (Potsdam)
Sylvio Klose, TLS (Tautenburg)
Jose Maria Castro Ceron, ROA (San Fernando)
Felipe Hoyo, CAHA (Almeria)
Javier Gorosabel, DSRI (Copenhagen)
on behalf of a larger European GRB collaboration
report:
"We have just obtained a 15-minute R-band exposure centred at
the GRB 000301C error box (Smith et al. GCN#568) starting at
01:15 UT on 4 March 2000 with the 1.23 m telescope at the
German-Spanish Calar Alto Observatory (CAHA).
Using the stars A-D of Garnavich et al. (GCN #573