GRB 000301C
GCN Circular 1063
Subject
GRB000301C: Late-time HST/STIS observation
Date
2001-05-29T19:48:38Z (24 years ago)
From
Andrew S. Fruchter at STScI <fruchter@stsci.edu>
A. Fruchter and P. Vreeswijk report for a larger collaboration:
The field of GRB 000301c was reobserved by the Hubble Space Telescope
using the STIS camera in open (50CCD) mode on the 25 Feb 2001, or
nearly one year after outburst. Twelve dithered exposures were
combined to produce a final image with an exposure time of 7031s.
No source is immediately visible at the position of the GRB. However,
when the image is convolved with gaussians or boxcars with
characteristic sizes from that of the PSF, 0."08, to 0."2, an extended
object appears to be visible under the position of the GRB and to its
NE. Although extended light from both a nearby bright star, and the
larger galaxy to the NW of the GRB make an exact determination of the
significance of this object difficult, we believe this is approximately
a 3-4 sigma detection. The probable host has an estimated magnitude of
R = 28.0 +/- 0.3. This magnitude is just consistent with the estimates
of an underlying host from our earlier imaging, GCN 627 and 701. It
is, furthermore, about two magnitudes brighter than we would expect the
OT to have been at this time, had it continued to decline with a
temporal power-law steeper than -2 (c.f. GCN 701 and Rhoads and
Fruchter, ApJ 2001, 546, 177).
If this is indeed a detection of a host, then in all cases where we
have obtained a deep HST image and an OT is well localized (to ~0."1),
a host has been found under the GRB. However, again, due to the
scattered and extended light in this region of the image, the detection
must be considered tentative.
The image can be seen at http://www.stsci.edu/~fruchter/GRB/000301C
GCN Circular 766
Subject
GRB000301C, UBVI optical observations
Date
2000-08-03T04:01:59Z (25 years ago)
From
Krzysztof Z. Stanek at CfA <kstanek@cfa.harvard.edu>
K. Z. Stanek (CfA), P. Garnavich (Notre Dame), P. Barmby, S. Jha (CfA)
report:
Given the microlensing interpretation of GRB000301C (Garnavich, Loeb &
Stanek 2000b: astro-ph/0008049) and the importance of any additional
data for this burst, we reduced several additional frames of the
optical counterpart of GRB000301C obtained with the FLWO 1.2m
telescope and UBVI filters on 2000 Mar. 4 (UT).
Our measurements are based on the comparison star A of Garnavich et
al. (2000a: GCN 573), calibrated by Henden (2000: GCN 583) (magnitudes
given by Jensen et al. 2000: astro-ph/0005609). We obtain the
following values:
Mar. 4.5097 UT U=20.89 \pm 0.13
Mar. 4.499 UT B=21.49 \pm 0.05
Mar. 4.478 UT V=20.98 \pm 0.05
Mar. 4.485 UT I=20.28 \pm 0.07
As discussed by Garnavich et al. (2000b), to take full advantage of
this unique burst a uniform reduction of all CCD data available would
be most desired. To encourage such an endeavor, we make all our CCD
data (seven 1kx1k frames; see also GCN 573 and 581) publicly available
through the anonymous ftp at
ftp://cfa-ftp.harvard.edu/pub/kstanek/GRB000301C/
Please contact K. Z. Stanek (kstanek@cfa.harvard.edu) if you have any
questions concerning the data.
This message can be cited.
GCN Circular 701
Subject
GRB 000301C: Further Late-Time HST/STIS observations
Date
2000-06-13T23:06:57Z (25 years ago)
From
Andrew S. Fruchter at STScI <fruchter@stsci.edu>
A. Fruchter, M. Metzger and L. Petro report for a larger collaboration:
The field of GRB 000301c was reobserved by the Hubble Space Telescope
using the STIS camera in open (50CCD) mode on the 19 April 2000. The
optical transient is still visible with an R magnitude of 27.9 +/-
0.15, where the error is dominated by uncertainties in the calibration
of STIS and the need to assume the shape of the spectrum across the
wide bandpass of the detector. The OT therefore is continuing the
steep decline reported in the previous GCN and remains consistent with
the late-time power-law reported in Rhoads and Fruchter
(astro-ph/0004057).
We find no evidence of a host galaxy underlying the GRB, to a magnitude
of at least 28.5. We believe the apparently extended emission
reported in our previous GCN is due to substantial, and larger than
expected, variability in the PSF. Although we have not yet been able
to fully reproduce the emission about the point source in our 3
April 2000 observations, we suspect this is due to very rapid variability
in the PSF. Further analysis of our data has now shown residuals in PSF
subtraction comparable in magnitude to that seen in the 3 April observation,
even when using PSFs from the same star taken in quick succession.
GCN Circular 630
Subject
GRB000301c results
Date
2000-04-10T09:28:01Z (26 years ago)
From
SG Bhargavi at Indian Inst of Astrophysics <bhargavi@iiap.ernet.in>
SG Bhargavi and R Cowsik (IIA, Bangalore) report the
results of optical data on GRB000301c observed
between Mar 2-4, 2000 (GCN-591):
Mar 2.9618UT R=20.02 \pm 0.03, B-R=0.97 \pm 0.2
Mar 4.9087UT R=20.58 \pm 0.05, B-R=0.734 \pm 0.14
Mar 3.9976UT R=20.49 \pm 0.10
The R-band magnitudes from VBT along with other values
from various GCN circulars have been plotted. The numbers marked
on the graph correspond to the serial number of entries in the table.
Two solid lines are fit by \alpha = -0.722 +/- 0.05 and
\alpha=-2.9 +/- 0.017, which seems to be a better fit than the dotted
lines where the power law index is \alpha = -0.97+/- 0.07 and
/alpha= -1.99 +/- 0.19 respectively.
(Mid-expoure time for B-R is 2.975UT and 4.9375UT respectively;
this combined with B-R values in GCN \#588, 585 shows that B-R is
falling as -0.25mag/day)
The table as well as the graph (post-script file) are available
at our anonymous FTP server: narmada.iiap.ernet.in
change directory to bhargavi/GRB000301c/
This message may be cited.
------------------------------------------
PS: this mail has bounced back many times..giving my last trail
[GCN OPS NOTE: The reference to the bounced email problems was discussing
a problem with the e-mail servers and network at the India end, and not with
the processing at the GCN end.]
GCN Circular 627
Subject
GRB 000301C: Late-Time HST/STIS CCD Imaging of the field
Date
2000-04-10T01:38:58Z (26 years ago)
From
Andrew S. Fruchter at STScI <fruchter@stsci.edu>
A. Fruchter (STScI), A. Smette (GSFC), T. Gull (GSFC), H. Ferguson, L. Petro,
J. Rhoads, and K. Sahu (STScI) for a larger HST GRB Collaboration:
We have re-imaged the field of GRB 000301C with HST using the STIS CCD
in both 50CCD (open) and LP (long-pass) mode. The observations were
centered about 3.9 April 2000 UT with total exposure times of 2280s
in both filters.
We detect a bright source on a fainter extended object at the position
of the optical transient (OT). The position of the peak of emission
from the object agrees with that of the OT on previous HST images taken
on 6 March 2000 (see GCN 602