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GCN Circular 5182

Subject
GRB 060526: Tautenburg OT observation and light curve fitting
Date
2006-05-29T02:41:31Z (18 years ago)
From
Alexander Kann at TLS Tautenburg <kann@tls-tautenburg.de>
D. A. Kann & C. Hoegner (Thueringer Landessternwarte Tautenburg) report:

The afterglow of GRB 060526 (Campana et al., GCN 5162) was observed with the 
Tautenburg 1.34m Schmidt telescope in the R band in inclement conditions (passing 
clouds). A total of four 600 sec exposures were obtained, each significantly deeper than the 
DSS. The afterglow is detected in each image. We measure the magnitude from a stack of 
all four images, using the magnitude Khamitov et al. (GCN 5177) derived for the USNO star 
at RA=15:31:18.6, Dec=+00:17:34.9 (R=16.848):

Epoch		dt (days)	Rc	dRc
28.9768	2.2904		21.55	0.13

We collect data from Rykoff et al. (GCN 5166), Covino et al. (GCN 5167), Greco et al. 
(GCN 5171), Khamitov et al. (GCN 5173), Morgan & Dai (GCN 5175), Khamitov et al. (GCN 
5177), Thoene et al. (GCN 5179) and Rumyantsev & Pozanenko (GCN 5181). This data set 
can be fit by a single power law with slope alpha = 0.99 +/- 0.01, starting at 6000 seconds 
after the burst (Rykoff et al., GCN 5166). But we find significant deviations from the power 
law, as high as 0.3 mags above and below (cf. Halpern et al., GCN 5176) the fit, leading to 
a high chi^2. This behaviour is reminiscent of GRBs 021004 and 030329. For the data 
beyond 1.3 days, we find alpha = 1.64 +/- 0.17, in agreement with Thoene et al. (GCN 
5179).

Our data can not rule out that a break in the light curve has occured, lying well on the 
extrapolation of the data of Thoene et al. (GCN 5179). If so, the post jet-break decay slope 
is very shallow. The afterglow is thus well-suited for further follow-up, and dense R band 
imaging is encouraged.

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