GRB 001109
GCN Circular 1168
Subject
GRB001109, Radio Monitoring
Date
2001-11-30T22:36:42Z (24 years ago)
From
Edo Berger at Caltech <ejb@astro.caltech.edu>
E. Berger (Caltech) and D. A. Frail (NRAO) report on behalf of a
larger collaboration:
"We have continued to monitor the radio source detected by Taylor et
al. (VLA J1830+5518; GCN #880) inside the BeppoSAX error box of
GRB001109 (GCN #878) at 1.43, 4.86, and 8.46 GHz with the VLA. This
source had previously been claimed to be the afterglow of GRB001109 by
Rol et al. (GCN #889). Although the mean flux density of the source at
8.46 GHz varies by 10-20%, there has been no secular decrease in the
flux density over a period of 390 days. A similar behavior is observed
at 1.43 and 4.86 GHz. Moreover, the flux density at 1.43 GHz is
consistently brighter than at 8.46 GHz, with a spectral slope typical
of extragalactic radio sources. We conclude that this source is not
the afterglow of GRB001109, and therefore the optical galaxy at
z=0.398 associated with it (Vreeswijk et al. GCN #886; Greiner et al.
GCN #887; Afanasiev et al. GCN #1090; Sokolov et al. GCN #1092) is not
a GRB host galaxy."
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 1092
Subject
GRB001109, Host Galaxy Astrometry
Date
2001-09-11T08:19:24Z (24 years ago)
From
Vladimir Sokolov at SAO RAS <sokolov@sao.ru>
V. Sokolov, T. Fatkhullin, V. Komarova (SAO RAS) report:
"Using the images obtained on July 24, 2001 (GCN #1090), we performed the
astrometry to reveal where the VLA radiosource
(Taylor et al. GCN #880; RA = 18h30m06.51s, DEC = 55d18'35.7", equinox J2000)
has been placed. We used 10 USNO stars not saturated on the images
and the astrometrical uncertainty is found to be about 0.5 arcsec,
including statistic and systematic errors.
The astrometry showed that radiosource is placed on the West
outskirt of the brighter component A (GCN #1090