GCN Circular 17281
Subject
GRB 150101B/Swift J123205.1-105602: VLT observations and redshift
Event
Date
2015-01-04T21:00:02Z (11 years ago)
From
Andrew Levan at U.of Leicester <A.J.Levan@warwick.ac.uk>
A.J. Levan (U. Warwick), J. Hjorth (DARK/NBI), K. Wiersema, N.R. Tanvir (U. Leicester) report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
"We obtained imaging and spectroscopy of GRB 150101B/Swift J123205.1-105602 (Cummings et al. ATel 6871) with the ESO VLT on 4 Jan 2015, beginning at approximately 06:40 UT. At this epoch 1280s of I-band and1080s of z-band observations were obtained with FORS2 in ~1" seeing. The known galaxy, 2MASX J12320498-1056010, is clearly detected in these images, and its light extends under the position of the candidate optical counterpart reported by Fong et al. (GCN 17271). We do not detect any point source at this location, although the combination of differing seeing, band and the underlying host galaxy mean that we cannot make any strong statements about the variability of the source. We additionally note that the 90% confidence of the refined XRT position (http://www.swift.ac.uk/xrt_live_cat/00020464/) currently includes the nucleus of 2MASX J12320498-1056010, but not the source identified by Fong et al.
In addition we obtained spectroscopic observations of 2MASX J12320498-1056010, covering the wavelength range 5300-8500A. The continuum is well detected across this wavelength range, with several prominent absorption features, most notably Mg b, and Na D at a preliminary redshift of z=0.134. We do not see any emission lines, although H-beta, [OIII] (4959,5007) and H-alpha all fall within our wavelength range at this redshift. We are not sensitive to the line identified by Castro-Tirado et al. (GCN 17278