- GCN/BACODINE POSITION NOTICE
TITLE: GCN/SWIFT NOTICE
NOTICE_DATE: Fri 01 Apr 05 14:20:34 UT
NOTICE_TYPE: Swift-BAT GRB Position
TRIGGER_NUM: 113120, Seg_Num: 0
GRB_RA: 247.880d {+16h 31m 31s} (J2000),
247.947d {+16h 31m 47s} (current),
247.250d {+16h 28m 60s} (1950)
GRB_DEC: +2.184d {+02d 11' 02"} (J2000),
+2.173d {+02d 10' 22"} (current),
+2.290d {+02d 17' 24"} (1950)
GRB_ERROR: 4.00 [arcmin radius, statistical only]
GRB_INTEN: 6309 [cnts] Peak=170 [cnts/sec]
TRIGGER_DUR: 1.024 [sec]
TRIGGER_INDEX: 155 E_range: 50-350 keV
BKG_INTEN: 26994 [cnts]
BKG_TIME: 51600.00 SOD {14:20:00.00} UT
BKG_DUR: 8 [sec]
GRB_DATE: 13461 TJD; 91 DOY; 05/04/01
GRB_TIME: 51615.32 SOD {14:20:15.32} UT
GRB_PHI: 5.61 [deg]
GRB_THETA: 55.67 [deg]
SOLN_STATUS: 0x3
RATE_SIGNIF: 45.34 [sigma]
IMAGE_SIGNIF: 10.00 [sigma]
MERIT_PARAMS: +1 +0 +0 +1 +3 +16 +0 +0 +53 +1
SUN_POSTN: 11.00d {+00h 43m 59s} +4.73d {+04d 43' 36"}
SUN_DIST: 122.68 [deg]
MOON_POSTN: 276.92d {+18h 27m 40s} -28.38d {-28d 22' 36"}
MOON_DIST: 41.31 [deg]
MOON_ILLUM: 55 [%]
GAL_COORDS: 17.42, 31.82 [deg] galactic lon,lat of the burst (or transient)
ECL_COORDS: 245.72, 23.78 [deg] ecliptic lon,lat of the burst (or transient)
COMMENTS: SWIFT-BAT GRB Coordinates.
COMMENTS: This is a rate trigger.
COMMENTS: A point_source was found.
COMMENTS: This does not match any source in the on-board catalog.
COMMENTS: This does not match any source in the ground catalog.
COMMENTS: This is a GRB.
- red DSS finding chart
ps-file
- GCN/SWIFT NOTICE
TITLE: GCN/SWIFT NOTICE
NOTICE_DATE: Fri 01 Apr 05 14:22:56 UT
NOTICE_TYPE: Swift-XRT Position
TRIGGER_NUM: 113120, Seg_Num: 0
GRB_RA: 247.8688d {+16h 31m 29s} (J2000),
247.9350d {+16h 31m 44s} (current),
247.2383d {+16h 28m 57s} (1950)
GRB_DEC: +2.1871d {+02d 11' 14"} (J2000),
+2.1761d {+02d 10' 34"} (current),
+2.2934d {+02d 17' 36"} (1950)
GRB_ERROR: 5.8 [arcsec radius, statistical plus systematic]
GRB_INTEN: 2310.85 [arb]
GRB_SIGNIF: 6.16 [sigma]
GRB_DATE: 13461 TJD; 91 DOY; 05/04/01
GRB_TIME: 51742.71 SOD {14:22:22.71} UT
TAM[0-3]: 327.59 237.19 261.25 242.53
AMPLIFIER: 2
WAVEFORM: 134
SUN_POSTN: 11.00d {+00h 43m 59s} +4.73d {+04d 43' 38"}
SUN_DIST: 122.70 [deg]
MOON_POSTN: 276.94d {+18h 27m 46s} -28.38d {-28d 22' 34"}
MOON_DIST: 41.33 [deg]
MOON_ILLUM: 55 [%]
GAL_COORDS: 17.41, 31.83 [deg] galactic lon,lat of the burst
ECL_COORDS: 245.71, 23.78 [deg] ecliptic lon,lat of the burst
COMMENTS: SWIFT-XRT Coordinates.
COMMENTS: WARNING: XRT alignment calibration is on-going, and there may be
COMMENTS: residual systematic offsets of several arcseconds not accounted for yet
COMMENTS: by our on-board position determination algorithm. We have increased
COMMENTS: the estimated error circle radius to take this into account.
- GCN/SWIFT NOTICE
TITLE: GCN/SWIFT NOTICE
NOTICE_DATE: Fri 01 Apr 05 14:23:57 UT
NOTICE_TYPE: Swift-BAT GRB Lightcurve
TRIGGER_NUM: 113120, Seg_Num: 0
GRB_RA: 247.880d {+16h 31m 31s} (J2000),
247.947d {+16h 31m 47s} (current),
247.250d {+16h 28m 60s} (1950)
GRB_DEC: +2.184d {+02d 11' 02"} (J2000),
+2.173d {+02d 10' 22"} (current),
+2.290d {+02d 17' 24"} (1950)
GRB_DATE: 13461 TJD; 91 DOY; 05/04/01
GRB_TIME: 51615.32 SOD {14:20:15.32} UT
TRIGGER_INDEX: 155
GRB_PHI: 5.61 [deg]
GRB_THETA: 55.67 [deg]
DELTA_TIME: 65498.00 [sec]
LC_URL: sw00113120000msb.lc
SUN_POSTN: 11.00d {+00h 43m 59s} +4.73d {+04d 43' 36"}
SUN_DIST: 122.68 [deg]
MOON_POSTN: 276.92d {+18h 27m 40s} -28.38d {-28d 22' 36"}
MOON_DIST: 41.31 [deg]
MOON_ILLUM: 55 [%]
GAL_COORDS: 17.42, 31.82 [deg] galactic lon,lat of the pointing direction
ECL_COORDS: 245.72, 23.78 [deg] ecliptic lon,lat of the pointing direction
COMMENTS: SWIFT-BAT GRB Lightcurve.
COMMENTS: This does not match any source in the ground catalog.
- GCN/SWIFT NOTICE
TITLE: GCN/SWIFT NOTICE
NOTICE_DATE: Fri 01 Apr 05 14:24:21 UT
NOTICE_TYPE: Swift-XRT Lightcurve
TRIGGER_NUM: 113120, Seg_Num: 0
POINT_RA: 247.895d {+16h 31m 35s} (J2000)
POINT_DEC: +2.188d {+02d 11' 15"} (J2000)
LC_START_DATE: 13461 TJD; 91 DOY; 05/04/01
LC_START_TIME: 51745.54 SOD {14:22:25.54} UT
LC_STOP_DATE: 13461 TJD; 91 DOY; 05/04/01
LC_STOP_TIME: 51852.95 SOD {14:24:12.95} UT
LC_LIVE_TIME: 107.35 [sec], 99.9%
DELTA_TIME: 86292.59 [sec]
N_BINS: 100
TERM_COND: 0
LC_URL: sw00113120000msx.lc
SUN_POSTN: 11.00d {+00h 43m 59s} +4.73d {+04d 43' 38"}
SUN_DIST: 122.67 [deg]
MOON_POSTN: 276.94d {+18h 27m 46s} -28.38d {-28d 22' 34"}
MOON_DIST: 41.32 [deg]
MOON_ILLUM: 55 [%]
GAL_COORDS: 17.43, 31.81 [deg] galactic lon,lat of the pointing direction
ECL_COORDS: 245.74, 23.78 [deg] ecliptic lon,lat of the pointing direction
COMMENTS: SWIFT-XRT Lightcurve.
COMMENTS: WARNING: This Lightcurve has an unrecognized termination condition.
- GCN notice #3161
L. Angelini (GSFC), J. L. Racusin, S. Hunsberger, D. N. Burrows, J. E.
Hill, J. A. Kennea, D. C. Morris, D. Grupe, J. A. Nousek (PSU), J. P.
Osborne, K. L. Page, M. R. Goad, A. P. Beardmore, O. Godet, A. F. Abbey, A.
A. Wells (U. Leicester), S. Campana, A. Moretti, C. Pagani, P. Romano, G.
Tagliaferri, G. Chincarini (INAF-OAB), G. Cusumano, V. La Parola, V.
Mangano, T. Mineo (INAF-IASF/Palermo), P. Giommi, M. Capalbi, M. Perri, F.
Tamburelli (ASDC), F. Marshall, N. White, N. Gehrels (GSFC), P. Roming, P.
Meszaros (PSU), P. Schady (MSSL), report on behalf of the Swift XRT team:
The Swift BAT instrument triggered on GRB050401 at 14:20:15 UT and Swift
executed a prompt slew (delayed by 9 seconds due to an Earth constraint)
. The XRT found a bright source located at the following position (based
on 38 counts in 2.5 seconds):
RA(J2000) = +16h 31m 29s,
Dec(J2000) = +02d 11' 14"
We estimate an uncertainty of about 6 arcseconds. This source is located
42 arcseconds from the BAT position.
We note that Swift had a solid attitude solution during this observation.
The XRT reported a prompt raw spectrum that peaks at about 1 keV with a
roughly power-law shape (based on 328 s of data in Windowed Timing mode).
- GCN notice #3162
L. Barbier (GSFC), S. Barthelmy (GSFC), J. Cummings (GSFC/NRC),
E. Fenimore (LANL), N. Gehrels (GSFC), D. Hullinger (UMD),
H. Krimm (GSFC/USRA), C. Markwardt (GSFC/UMD), J. Norris (GSFC),
J. Nousek (PSU), D. Palmer (LANL), A. Parsons (GSFC),
T. Sakamoto (GSFC/NRC), G. Sato (ISAS), M. Suzuki (Saitama),
J. Tueller (GSFC)
on behalf of the Swift team:
At 14:20:15 UT Swift-BAT triggered on burst GRB 050401 (trigger=113120).
The BAT-derived position is RA,Dec=247.880,+2.184 (J2000). We note this
is 42 arcsec from the XRT Position GCN Notice. The lightcurve
shows 5 main peaks with a total burst duration of 38 sec. The first peak
started about 9 sec before the trigger, and the fifth peak started
at T+23 sec. The peak count rate was 5000 cnts/sec. This burst
was 56 deg of the BAT bore sight (<10% coding). We note that
the Swift Star Trackers were locked at the time of the trigger and
all initial inspections indicate that the attitude solution for the s/c
is normal (unlike yesterday's episode).
- GCN notice #3163
R. McNaught (RSAA, ANU) and P.A. Price (IfA, Hawaii) report on behalf of
a larger collaboration:
We have observed the XRT position of GRB 050401 (Swift trigger 113120)
with the 40-inch telescope at Siding Spring Observatory starting at
April 1.637 UTC. In an unfiltered exposure of 120 sec, we identify a
source near the limiting magnitude of our observations, at approximate
coordinates:
16:31:28.81 +02:11:14.2 J2000
This source is within the XRT error circle, and not present in the DSS.
The source is about R ~ 20.3 mag. A subsequent image reveals that the
source is stationary.
Further observations are planned.
This message may be cited.
- GCN notice #3164
P.A. Price (IfA, Hawaii) and R. McNaught (RSAA, ANU) report on behalf of
a larger collaboration:
Continued observations of the field of GRB 050401 (GCN ##3161,3162) with
the 40-inch telescope at Siding Spring Observatory reveals that the
optical afterglow candidate (GCN #3163) is variable. In particular, in
the course of two unfiltered and four R-band images, the source appears
to have brightened and then faded. This source is therefore likely to
be the optical afterglow of GRB 050401.
Observations are ongoing at Siding Spring Observatory.
A rough finding chart showing the afterglow is available from:
http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/~price/grb050401finder.ps
This message may be cited.
- GCN notice #3165
E. S. Rykoff, S. A. Yost, D. A. Smith (Umich) report on behalf of the
ROTSE collaboration:
ROTSE-IIIa, located at Siding Spring Observatory, Australia responded to
Swift GRB050401 (Trigger #113120). An automated response produced
images beginning 6.2 seconds after the GCN trigger under good
conditions. The first image was taken at 01 Apr 14:20:39.2 UT, 33
seconds after the updated burst time as reported by Barbier et al (GCN
3162). We took ten 5 second, ten 20 second and sixty 60 s exposures,
and imaging is ongoing. The images are unfiltered and were calibrated
relative to USNO A2.0.
Individual images have limiting magnitudes ranging from 16.0-17.3. We
compared sets of 10 co-added frames to the DSS (second epoch). In our
first co-added set of images we have a marginal detection of a source
consistent with the XRT position (GCN 3161) and the candidate reported
by McNaught & Price (GCN 3163). The source is at 17.0+/-0.2 for a 151
second co-add starting at 14:20:39.2 UT, with a limiting magnitude of
17.4. We do not detect any significant flux in our following images, to
a limiting magnitude of 17.9/18.4 for sets of images beginning at
14:28:22.3 UT/14:39:57 UT.
We also note that our first 5-s image was taken coincidentally with the
end of the gamma-ray emission detected by Swift (GCN 3162). We do not
detect significant flux to a limiting magnitude of 16.0.
- GCN notice #3171
P. D'Avanzo, D. Fugazza (INAF-OAB), N. Masetti (INAF-IASF, Bologna) and
M. Pedani (TNG), on behalf of a larger collaboration, report:
"We have obtained R-band photometry of the optical afterglow (McNaught &
Price, GCN #3163; Rykoff et al., GCN #3165) of GRB050401 (Angelini et al.,
GCN #3161; Barbier et al., GCN #3162) using DOLoRes at TNG.
The observations, for a total exposure time of 30 minutes, were performed
under moderate seeing conditions (around 1.2 arcsec).
A preliminary analysis of the images allowed us to derive the following
photometry for the OT, calibrated after observing the SA104 Landolt
standard field:
R = 23.18 +/- 0.10 on 2005 April 2.072 UT, 11.39 hours after the burst
Using this OT magnitude and those reported in GCNs #3163 and #3165, and
assuming a canonical power-law decay, we obtain for the OT a decay index
alpha ~ 1, quite typical of GRB optical afterglows.
We are particularly grateful to the TNG staff for their remarkable support
to these observations."
This message is citeable.
- GCN notice #3173
T. Sakamoto (GSFC/NRC), S. Barthelmy, L. Barbier (GSFC),
J. Cummings (GSFC/NRC), E. Fenimore (LANL), N. Gehrels (GSFC),
D. Hullinger (UMD), H. Krimm (GSFC/USRA), C. Markwardt (GSFC/UMD),
D. Palmer (LANL), A. Parsons (GSFC), G. Sato (ISAS),
M. Suzuki (Saitama), M. Tashiro (Saitama U.), J. Tueller (GSFC),
on behalf of the Swift/BAT team:
At 14:20:15 UT Swift-BAT detected GRB 050401 (trigger=113120)
(GCN Circ 3162, Barbier et al.). The refined BAT ground position is
(RA,Dec) = 247.880, +2.191, [deg; J2000] +- 3 arcmin, (95% containment).
This is 38 arcseconds from the XRT (GCN Circ 3161, Angelini et al.) and
confirmed optical afterglow (GCN Circ 3163, McNaught et al.) positions.
The burst had 4 distinct peaks. There were three initial peaks of roughly
comparable intensity, at times T-6, T-1 and T+3. These peaks all had
durations of between 1 and 2 seconds. These peaks were followed by
a stronger peak beginning at T+23 and lasting ~6 seconds. The total
burst duration T90 is estimated at 33 seconds +/- 2 s
(including systematics)
The fluence derived from the event data is 1.4 X 10^-5 erg/cm^2
in the 15-350 keV band. The 1-s peak flux (T+24.6 s) is 14 ph/cm^2/s
(also 15-350 keV). The photon index of the 1-s peak spectrum
(T+0 s) is 1.17 +/- 0.12 (90% confidence). The time-averaged
spectrum yields a photon index of 1.50 +/- 0.06 (90% confidence).
Both the 1-s and time-averaged spectra are well fit by a simple power-law.
- GCN notice #3174
B. Kahharov, M. Ibrahimov, D. Sharapov (MAO), A.Pozanenko (IKI),
V.Rumyantsev (CrAO), G.Beskin (SAO) report:
We observed the afterglow (McNaught and Price, GCN 3163; Rykoff et al.,
GCN 3165) of the Swift GRB050401 (Angelini et al., GCN 3161; Barbier et
al., GCN 3162) with 1.5m telescope of Maidanak Astronomical Observatory
(MAO), Uzbekistan under good weather conditions (seeing is 1.0 arcsec).
Preliminary R-photometry against of USNO-B1.0 Catalog is following:
Mean time Exposure Mag.
(UT) (s)
Apr. 1.988 8x300 22.2 +/- 0.2
This message may be cited.
- GCN notice #3175
Kuntal Misra ((ARIES Naini Tal), Atish P. Kamble (Raman Reserach
Institute, Bangalore) and S. B. Pandey (ARIES Naini Tal), on behalf of
larger Indian GRB collaboration
The Swift GRB 050401 (trigger = 113120) was monitored from 1.04-m
reflector at ARIES, Naini Tal in V, R and I bands. The OT candidate
reported by McNaught and Price (GCN 3163), seen in our R band
(900 sec exp) frame taken on April 01.8359 UT was at 21.5 +/- 0.2 mag.
Using this magnitude of the optical afterglow and those reported in
GCN 3163 and GCN 3171, we derive a flux temporal decay index of ~ 1.0,
consistent to D'Avanzo et al. 2005 (GCN 3171).
This message can be cited.
- GCN notice #3176
Johan P. U. Fynbo, Brian L. Jensen, Jens Hjorth (Niels Bohr Institute),
Klaas Wiersema, Rhaana Starling (U. Amsterdam), Paul Vreeswijk (ESO),
Evert Rol, Andrew Levan (U. Leicester), Sara Ellison (U. Victoria),
Nicola Masetti (IASF-Bologna) report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
"Using FORS2 on the Very Large Telescope we have obtained spectra of the
afterglow of GRB 050401 (GCN 3161, 3162, 3163) on 2005, April 2. We detect
several absorption lines consistent with two absorption systems at redshifts
z = 2.50 and z = 2.90. The likely redshift of GRB 050401 is hence z = 2.90.
For a standard cosmology (H_0 = 70 km/s/Mpc, Omega_m = 0.3, Omega_w = 0.7,
w = -1) the Swift fluence (GCN 3173) corresponds to an isotropic energy
release of 2.6 x 10^53 erg.
We thank Paul Price for providing a finding chart for the optical afterglow
and the ESO staff for excellent support."
- GCN notice #3177
L. Saripalli (ATNF, CSIRO), K. Wu (MSSL, UCL), K. K. Ghosh (NASA-NSSTC),
D. A. Swartz (NASA-NSSTC) and A. F. Tennant (NASA-MSFC) report of radio
observations of GRB050401.
We observed the field of the GRB050401 using ATCA (6 km configuration)
at Narrarbri, Australia on 2005 April 02 15.02 UT and April 03 14.22 UT.
The duration of each observation was 1 hour.
We do not detect signals above rms of 0.5 (4.8 GHz) and 0.6 mJy (8.64 GHz)
in the field in each individual data set for the two observations. We also
do not find significant signal above an rms of 0.4 mJy for the combined
data set at 8.64 GHz. There appears to be a 2.5-sigma feature (rms of
0.3 mJy) at the position of the source (ref GCN 3163) in the combined
data set at 4.8 GHz. The feature could be spurious given that the uv
coverage was poor and the observation duration was short.
The observations were granted as ToO (April 02) and discretion observation
(April 03) by the ATNF director.
- GCN notice #3178
GRB050401: Radio observation at 610 MHz with GMRT
Poonam Chandra and Alak Ray (Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
(TIFR), Mumbai) report the observation of GRB 050401 with the Giant
Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT) on 2005 April 2.77 (UT) at 617 MHz
frequency with a bandwidth of 32 MHz. No radio emission is seen either at
the Optical Transient afterglow position (GCN 3163) or the revised Swift
BAT position (GCN 3173). The map rms is 0.23 mJy and 2-Sigma upper limit
to the GRB flux density is 0.46 mJy.
We thank the GMRT staff, in particular the National Centre for Radio
Astrophysics (NCRA) Director Dr. Rajaram Nityananda for making the
observations possible, and Dr. Paolo Freire, Yashwant Gupta and
collaborators for allowing a part of their time to be used for this
observation. GMRT is run by NCRA-TIFR. This observation was Target of
Opportunity observation and the observating time was granted as
discretionary time at the GMRT.
- GCN notice #3179
S. Golenetskii, R.Aptekar, E. Mazets, V. Pal'shin, D. Frederiks, and
T. Cline on behalf of the Konus-Wind team report:
A long multipeak GRB 050401 (Swift-BAT trigger 113120, GCN 3162,3173)
triggered Konus-Wind at 51611.344 s UT (14:20:11.344).
As observed by Konus-Wind, it had a duration of ~36 s,
fluence (1.93 +/- 0.04)10-5 erg/cm2, peak flux (2.45 +/- 0.12)10-6
erg/cm2 s (both in the 20 keV - 2 MeV energy range).
We derived two spectra: the first one integrated over three initial
peaks (0 - 16.6 s) and the second integrated over the last, strongest
peak (24.8 - 32 s). Both spectra are well fitted by a GRB (Band) model.
For the 1st spectrum:
the low-energy photon index is alpha = -1.15 +/- 0.16,
the high energy photon index beta = -2.65 +/- 0.31,
the break energy E0 = 156 +/- 45 keV,
and the peak energy Ep = 132 +/- 16 keV.
For the 2nd spectrum:
the low-energy photon index is alpha = -0.83 +/- 0.21,
the high energy photon index beta = -2.37 +/- 0.14,
the break energy E0 = 102 +/- 30 keV,
and the peak energy Ep = 119 +/- 26 keV.
Assuming z = 2.90 (GCN 3176) and a standard cosmology model
with H_0 = 70 km/s/Mpc, Omega_M = 0.3, Omega_\Lambda = 0.7,
the isotropic energy release is E_iso = (3.53 +/- 0.07)1053 erg,
the maximum luminosity is (L_iso)_max = (1.75 +/- 0.09)1053 ers/s,
and the rest-frame peak energies are Ep_rest = (515 +/- 62) keV and
Ep_rest = (464 +/- 101) keV correspondingly for the first and second
spectrum.
- GCN notice #3187
A. M. Soderberg (Caltech) reports on behalf of the
Caltech-NRAO-Carnegie GRB collaboration:
"Using the Very Large Array at 8.5 GHz, we observed the
field of GRB050401 (GCN 3162) on 2005 Apr 7.29 UT.
We detect a radio source at our detection threshold at
the following position:
RA(J2000) = +16h 31m 28.82s, Dec(J2000) = +02d 11' 14.83"
with an estimated uncertainty of 0.5 arcsec in each coordinate.
This source is within the XRT error circle (GCN 3161) and
consistent with the optical afterglow position (GCN 3163).
The flux density of the source is 122 +- 33 uJy.
Further observations are planned."
- GCN notice #3233
K. Torii (Osaka U.) reports
"The error region of GRB 050401 (Angelini, et al. GCN 3161; Barbier,
et al. GCN 3162) was observed with the ART 14-inch telescope. BVRcIc
imaging started at 2005 April 1, 14:22:23 UT (128-s after trigger) and
60-s exposure in each filter was repeated.
The optical afterglow (McNaught & Price GCN 3163) is not detected in
our frames and the following 3-sigma upper limits are derived relative
to USNO-B1.0 magnitudes.
MeanEpoch(UT) Magnitude Exposure
14:22:53 >12.8Rc 60s
14:24:02 >13.2Ic 60s
14:27:27 >13.4Rc 60s
14:28:34 >13.4Ic 60s
14:32:00 >13.7Rc 60s
14:33:07 >14.0Ic 60s
- GCN notice #3319
G. Greco, C. Bartolini, A. Guarnieri, A. Piccioni (Bologna University),=20
G. Pizzichini (IASF-CNR, Sezione di Bologna), S. Bernabei and S. =
Marinoni=20
(Osservatorio di Bologna) report:
"We observed the optical afterglow (Mc Naught and Price, GCN 3163) of =
the Swift
GRB050401 (Angelini et al. GCN 3161) with the 152-cm G. D. Cassini =
telescope=20
of Bologna University equipped with the BFOSC CCD imager.
We obtained 2x1800s Rc images on 2005 April 2.056 and April 2.092 UT.
From the first image, in good sky conditions (seeing about 2"), we find
Rc =3D 22.7 +- 0.4, using the calibration kindly provided to us by P. =
D'Avanzo=20
and N. Masetti, performed at TNG telescope.=20
In the second image, less deep, the object is hardly visible.
The first image of the OT is posted into a public directory from where=20
it can be retrieved by sftp using
hostname: ermione.bo.astro.it=20
username: publicGRB=20
password: GRB_bo=20
directory: GRB050401".
- GCN notice #3454
A. Henden (AAVSO/USNO) reports on behalf of the USNO GRB Team:
We have acquired BVRcIc all-sky photometry for 11x11arcmin
fields centered on the coordinates of recent GRB localizations
with the USNOFS 1.0-m telescope on one photometric night
but with bright moonlight. Stars brighter than V=12.0
are saturated and should be used with care. We have placed
the photometric data on our anonymous ftp site:
ftp://ftp.nofs.navy.mil/pub/outgoing/aah/grb/grb050319.dat
ftp://ftp.nofs.navy.mil/pub/outgoing/aah/grb/grb050401.dat
ftp://ftp.nofs.navy.mil/pub/outgoing/aah/grb/grb050408.dat
ftp://ftp.nofs.navy.mil/pub/outgoing/aah/grb/grb050416.dat
ftp://ftp.nofs.navy.mil/pub/outgoing/aah/grb/grb050502a.dat
ftp://ftp.nofs.navy.mil/pub/outgoing/aah/grb/grb050509b.dat
The astrometry in these files is based on linear plate solutions
with respect to UCAC2. The external errors are less than 100mas.
The estimated external photometric error is about 0.03mag.
Since these bursts had identified optical afterglows, we expect
to improve the photometric calibration on subsequent nights.
As always, you should check the dates on the .dat file prior to
final publication to get the latest photometry. There is
a README file on the ftp directory to give you information
about the procedures used to calibrate these fields.
- astro-ph/0510566 from 19 Oct 2005
Pasquale: Swift and optical observations of GRB 050401
We present the results of the analysis of gamma-ray and X-ray data of GRB
050401 taken with the Swift satellite, together with a series of ground-based
follow-up observations. The Swift X-ray light curve shows a clear break at
about 4900 seconds after the GRB. The decay indices before and after the break
are consistent with a scenario of continuous injection of radiation from the
'central engine' of the GRB to the fireball. Alternatively, this behaviour
could result if ejecta are released with a range of Lorentz factors with the
slower shells catching up the faster at the afterglow shock position. The two
scenarios are observationally indistinguishable. The GRB 050401 afterglow is
quite bright in the X-ray band but weak in the optical, with an optical to
X-ray flux ratio similar to those of 'dark bursts'. We detect a significant
amount of absorption in the X-ray spectrum, with N_H = (1.7 +/- 0.2) x 10^22
cm^-2 at a redshift of z=2.9, which is typical of a dense circumbust medium.
Such high column density implies an unrealistic optical extinction of 30
magnitudes if we adopt the Galactic extinction law, which would not consistent
with optical detection of the afterglow. This suggests that the extinction law
is different from the Galactic one.
- 0806.4270 from 26 Jun 2008
Kamble: Optical Observations of GRB 050401 Afterglow : A case for Double Jet Model
Abstract: The afterglow of GRB 050401 presents several novel and interesting features :
[1] An initially faster decay in optical band than in X-rays. [2] A break in
the X-ray light curve after $\sim$ 0.06 day with an unusual slope after the
break. [3] The X-ray afterglow does not show any spectral evolution across the
break while the R band light curve does not show any break.
We have modeled the observed multi-band evolution of the afterglow of GRB
050401 as originating in a two component jet, interpreting the break in X-ray
light curve as due to lateral expansion of a narrow collimated outflow which
dominates the X-ray emission. The optical emission is attributed to a wider jet
component. Our model reproduces all the observed features of multi-band
afterglow of GRB 050401.
We present optical observations of GRB 050401 using the 104-cm Sampurnanand
Telescope at ARIES, Nainital. Results of the analysis of multi-band data are
presented and compared with GRB 030329, the first reported case of double jet.