GCN Circular 10680
Subject
GRB 100425A: candidate optical afterglow from the VLT
Date
2010-04-25T08:44:36Z (15 years ago)
From
Daniele Malesani at Dark Cosmology Centre, Niels Bohr Inst <malesani@dark-cosmology.dk>
D. Malesani (DARK/NBI), A. J. Levan (Univ. Warwick), N. R. Tanvir (Univ.
Leicester), J. P. U. Fynbo (DARK/NBI), P. Goldoni (APC/Univ. Paris 7 and
SAp/CEA), report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
We are observing the field of GRB 100425A (Grupe et al., GCN 10673) with
the ESO VLT equipped with the X-shooter spectrograph.
In the R-band acquisition image, taken starting around 06:51 UT
(approximately 4 hr after the GRB), we detect two sources within the
refined XRT error circle (http://www.swift.ac.uk/sper/), at coordinates:
A: RA(J2000) = 19:56:47.30, Dec(J2000) = -26:25:49.3
B: RA(J2000) = 19:56:47.13, Dec(J2000) = -26:25:50.1
Source A is visible in the DSS, and has a similar magnitude to its
archival value. Source B is not readily visible in the DSS and has a
magnitude R = 20.55 +- 0.2, which is at the limit of the DSS
sensitivity. The large error comes mostly from calibration scatter in
comparison with USNO-B1 stars.
In a second image taken starting at 7:44 UT (4.9 hr after the GRB),
source B has faded by 0.17 +- 0.08 mag.
Given the consistency of its position with the XRT error circle and the
moderate evidence for variability, we propose source B as the optical
afterglow of GRB 100425A.
A finding chart from the X-shooter image can be seen at the following URL:
http://www.astro.ku.dk/~malesani/GRB/100425A/GRB100425A_finder.png
Further observations and analysis are ongoing. We acknowledge a
particularly helpful and attentive support from the ESO staff in
Paranal, especially Jonathan Smoker, Lorena Faundez, Manuel Olivares
and Steffen Mieske.