GRB 090205
GCN Circular 8976
Subject
GRB 090205: Zadko Telescope late-time observations
Date
2009-03-11T03:45:11Z (17 years ago)
From
David Coward at U of Western Aus. <coward@physics.uwa.edu.au>
SUBJECT: GRB 090205: Zadko Telescope late-time observations
From: D.M. Coward at UWA
T.P. Vaalsta reports on behalf of the UWA Zadko Telescope Team:
D.M. Coward, T.P. Vaalsta, J. Zadko, A. Imerito, D. Blair, P. Luckas,
S. Gordon, K. Frost, A. Fletcher (U. of Western Australia)
M. Todd, M. Zadnik (Curtin University)
M. Boer, A. Klotz (TAROT)
The Zadko Telescope team observed the field of GRB 090205
following the report by N. Gehrels and M. Perri (GCN 8525, 09/02/06
14:46:05 GMT). Observations started at 09/02/06 16:38:29 GMT using an
iKon DW436BV CAMERA without filters mounted on the F/4 1.0m Zadko
Telescope about 17.6 hours after the initial burst trigger (GCN 8884).
The GRB field was imaged for a total of 4460s until dawn. In a 1100s
stacked image, a candidate OA with 23.2(3) white magnitude was
observed at the enhanced XRT position (GCN 8885). The OA magnitude
was estimated differentially using nearby nearby USNO-B1 stars as
references.
The same field was imaged 2 weeks later and the candidate OA was not
detected.
The UWA Zadko Telescope is currently being commissioned.
This message is quotable in publications
GCN Circular 8896
Subject
VLA radio upper limit on GRB 090205
Date
2009-02-07T14:57:15Z (17 years ago)
From
Poonam Chandra at U Virginia/NRAO <pc8s@virginia.edu>
Poonam Chandra (RMC) and Dale A. Frail (NRAO) report on
behalf of the Caltech-NRAO-Carnegie GRB Collaboration:
"We used the Very Large Array to observe the field of view toward
GRB 090205 (GCN 8884) at a frequency of 8.46 GHz on 2009 Jan 07.50
UT. The GRB radio afterglow is undetected at 3-sigma level. The
flux density at the VLT afterglow position (GCB 8887) is 21 � 47 uJy.
The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the National
Science Foundation operated under cooperative agreement by Associated
Universities, Inc."
GCN Circular 8895
Subject
GRB 090205: VLT optical decay
Date
2009-02-07T09:35:05Z (17 years ago)
From
Paolo D'Avanzo at INAF-OAB <paolo.davanzo@brera.inaf.it>
P. D'Avanzo, D. Fugazza (INAF-OAB), V. D'Elia (INAF-OAR), R. Salvaterra,
C. C. Thoene (INAF-OAB), S. Piranomonte (INAF-OAR), S. Covino, S.
Campana (INAF-OAB), G. Chincarini (Univ. Bicocca) report, on behalf of
the MISTICI collaboration:
We continued monitoring GRB 090205 (Perri et al., GCN 8884) with the
ESO-VLT in imaging mode. Observations were carried out in R-band with
the FORS1 camera about 1.35 days after the burst.
Preliminary analysis of a first set of images (total exposure: 12 min)
reveals that the optical afterglow (D'Avanzo et al. GCN 8887; Kruehler &
Greiner GCN 8888) is still detected and that it faded by about 3 mags
with respect to our previous epoch of VLT observations (D'Avanzo et al.
GCN 8887). Assuming a power-law decy, the inferred decay index between
this two epochs is alpha ~ 1.8, steeper than what measured in the X-rays
at earlier epochs (Perri & Stratta, GCN 8891). Further optical
observations are ongoing.
We acknowledge the VLT staff for their support, in particular G. James
and L. Schmidtobreick.
GCN Circular 8893
Subject
GRB 090205: Swift/UVOT Upper Limits
Date
2009-02-06T16:54:59Z (17 years ago)
From
Wayne Landsman at GSFC/SSAI <wayne.b.landsman@nasa.gov>