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GCN Circular 43851

Subject
GRB 260226A: Fermi GBM observation
Date
2026-02-26T16:21:05Z (14 days ago)
Edited On
2026-03-04T16:10:05Z (8 days ago)
From
Elisabetta Bissaldi at Politecnico and INFN Bari <elisabetta.bissaldi@ba.infn.it>
Edited By
Judith Racusin at NASA/GSFC <judith.racusin@nasa.gov> on behalf of Elisabetta Bissaldi at Politecnico and INFN Bari <elisabetta.bissaldi@ba.infn.it>
Via
Web form
E. Bissaldi (Politecnico and INFN Bari), O.J. Roberts (Uni. of Galway, Ireland), P. Veres (UAH) and A. von Kienlin (MPE) report on behalf of the Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor Team:


"At 10:39:05 UT on 26 February 2026, the Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) triggered and located GRB 260226A (trigger 793795080/260226443), which was also detected by Fermi-LAT (Depalo et al. 2026, GCN 43844 and 43850) and AstroSat CZTI (Harsha et al. 2026, GCN 43846).

The Fermi GBM on-ground location (GCN 43840) is consistent with the Fermi-LAT position.

The angle from the Fermi LAT boresight is 26 degrees.

The GBM light curve consists of a very bright and structured emission episode with a duration (T90) of about 173 s (50-300 keV). 

The time-averaged spectrum from T0 to T0+81 s is best fit by a Band function with Epeak = 723 +/- 8 keV, alpha = -0.95 +/- 0.01, and beta = -2.47 +/- 0.02. 

The event fluence (10-1000 keV) in this time interval is (4.54 +/- 0.01)E-04 erg/cm^2. The 1-sec peak photon flux measured starting from T0+19.3 s in the 10-1000 keV band is 166 +/- 2 ph/s/cm^2.


The spectral analysis results presented above are preliminary;
final results will be published in the GBM GRB Catalog:
https://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/W3Browse/fermi/fermigbrst.html

For Fermi GBM data and info, please visit the official Fermi GBM Support Page:
https://fermi.gsfc.nasa.gov/ssc/data/access/gbm/"
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