GRB 050709
GCN Circular 3702
Subject
GRB 050709: PROMPT Rc Observations
Date
2005-07-30T05:41:53Z (20 years ago)
From
Josh Haislip at U.North Carolina <haislip@physics.unc.edu>
J. Haislip, J. Kirschbrown, D. Reichart report on behalf of the UNC team of
the FUN GRB Collaboration:
Under the control of Skynet, PROMPT automatically observed the localization
of the probable short-hard GRB 050709 (Butler et al., GCN 3570; Boer et
al., GCN 3653) beginning 1.1 days after the burst (Bayliss et al., GCN
3569) and again beginning 8.3 days after the burst.
3-sigma limiting magnitudes are based on 5 USNO-B1.0 stars:
Mean Time Integration Filter Limiting Telescope
Since GRB Time Magnitude
1d 5h 36m 82 x 80s Rc 21.6 PROMPT-5
8d 9h 3m 136 x 80s Rc 21.6 PROMPT-5
We detect the host galaxy (Fox et al., GCN 3585; Price et al., GCN 3612)
in both epochs and measure its brightness to be Rc = 21.16 +/- 0.26 and Rc
= 21.06 +/- 0.21, respectively. PSF-matched image subtraction using ISIS2
(Alard 2000) does not reveal the afterglow (Price et al., GCN 3612).
PROMPT is still being built and commissioned.
Alard, C. 2000, A&AS, 114, 363
GCN Circular 3688
Subject
GRB050709: Second Epoch Chandra Observation
Date
2005-07-27T05:00:15Z (20 years ago)
From
Patrick B. Cameron at Caltech <pbc@astro.caltech.edu>
P. B. Cameron (Caltech), F. A. Harrison (Caltech) and D. A. Frail (NRAO)
report on behalf of the Caltech-NRAO-Carnegie GRB Collaboration:
"We have observed the HETE localization region for GRB050709 (GCN 3570)
with the Chandra X-ray Observatory + ACIS, in a second 18.2 ksec
observation beginning at 2005 July 25.86 UT (mean epoch 16.04 days after
the burst).
In contrast to earlier reports by Antonelli et al. (GCN 3686), we find
that the X-ray source reported earlier by Fox et al. (GCN 3585) has faded.
In reanalyzing both epochs, we measure 10 +/- 3 counts (0.3 - 8.0 keV) for
the second epoch, corresponding to a count rate of 5.5 +/- 1.6 e-4 cts/s.
This compares to 1.3 +/- 0.2 e-3 cts/s measured for the first epoch,
confirming that the source has faded with a decay of t**-0.46 +/- 0.18
since the first Chandra epoch. Although this decay is shallower than
typical for an afterglow, the variability implies it is the likely
counterpart to the GRB.
We thank the staff at the Chandra X-ray Center for their execution of this
Target of Opportunity observation and rapid processing of the data."
GCN Circular 3686
Subject
GRB050709: Second Epoch Chandra Observation
Date
2005-07-27T01:26:13Z (20 years ago)
From
Angelo Antonelli at Obs. Astro. di Roma <a.antonelli@mporzio.astro.it>
L.A. Antonelli, M.L. Conciatore (INAF/OAR), D. Malesani (SISSA), S.
Covino, P. D'Avanzo, S. Campana, G. Tagliaferri (INAF/OABr), M. Della
Valle (INAF/OAA), F. Fiore, G.L. Israel, L. Stella (INAF/OAR), G.
Chincarini (Univ. Milano-Bicocca), report on behalf of the MISTICI
collaboration:
The Chandra X-ray observatory observed a second time the field of the
GRB 050709 (Butler et al., GCN 3570; Boer et al., GCN 3653). The
observation, performed with ACIS, started on 2005 Jul 25.86234 UT and
ended on 2005 Jul 26.09042, for a total exposure time of 18284 s. The
X-ray source reported by Fox et al. (GCN 3585) and coincident with the
proposed optical counterpart (Jensen et al., GCN 3589; Price et al.,
GCN 3612