GRB 011121
GCN Circular 1463
Subject
HST Imaging of the Host of GRB 011121
Date
2002-08-02T19:02:08Z (23 years ago)
From
Josh Bloom at CIT <jsb@astro.caltech.edu>
HST Imaging of the Host of GRB 011121
J. S. Bloom (Caltech, Harvard/CfA) and P. A. Price (RSSA, ANU) report:
"Deep late-time images of the field of GRB 011121 were acquired with the
Hubble Space Telescope in from 21 April to 2 May 2002 UT as part of the
large GRB program #9180 (Kulkarni, PI). Five filters were used---F450W,
F555W, F702W, F814W, F850LP---with a total integration time of 4500 sec
per filter.
The transient afterglow plus intermediate-time bump, suggested elsewhere
as an accompanying supernova (SN) to the GRB (Bloom et al. 2002, Garnavich
et al. 2002), faded beyond detection in each filter. There is no apparent
persistent emission at the burst location aside from diffuse light from
the host galaxy. In Bloom et al. (table 1) we noted the estimated the
contribution of this diffuse light to the total measured flux of the
OT/SN; using the host images as a template for subtraction from earlier
epochs, we confirm those estimations were correct to within the stated
errors; here we provide a direct measurement of the diffuse host flux
contributing to the 0.5" radius aperture PSF photometry: f_nu(host)[F450W,
F555W, F702W, F814W, F850LP] = (0.038 +- 0.048), (0.067 +- 0.034), (0.154
+- 0.035), (0.195 +- 0.067), (0.305 +- 0.184) microJy. These fluxes have
not been corrected for Galactic extinction.
Two rather blue compact knots of emission are detected West of the galaxy
core, near to the OT/SN. Knot #1 is positioned at 0.52"E, 0.01"N and knot
#2 is 0.08"E, 0.28"N relative to the OT/SN location. [For reference, the
OT/SN was 1.99" W, 0.85" N of the star labeled as "B" in figure 1 of Bloom
et al.]. At the redshift of the host (z=0.362; Garnavich et al.) even the
closest of these knot lies 1.5 kpc in projection from the burst site.
A close-in color image of the host may be found at:
http://cfa160.harvard.edu/~jsbloom/grb011121
Though we cannot rule out these knots as background galaxies, given the
detection of Hydrogen Balmer-line and [OII] emission in the spectrum of
the larger "host" galaxy, these knots are likely strong pockets of star
formation in the host itself."
This message may be cited.
Paper References:
-----------------
1. Bloom et al., 2002, ApJ Letters, v572, 45-49
2. Garnavich et al., 2002, submitted to ApJ, (astro-ph/0204234)
GCN Circular 1288
Subject
GRB 011121: Fourth Epoch of HST Imaging
Date
2002-03-22T00:37:58Z (24 years ago)
From
Josh Bloom at CIT <jsb@astro.caltech.edu>
GRB 011121: Fourth Epoch of HST Imaging
J. S. Bloom, S. R. Kulkarni, D. E. Reichart, P. A. Price, on behalf of
the Caltech-NRAO-CARA GRB Collaboration and co-investigators on the
large HST Cycle 10 GRB program (#9180), report:
Following the discussion from Kulkarni et al. (GCN #1276) the fourth epoch
of HST imaging (4 Feb 2002 UT) of the afterglow of GRB 011121 has revealed
continued fading of the intermediate-time red bump (Garnavich et al. GCN
#1273; Bloom et al. GCN #1274; GCN #1276). Following are the magnitudes
and fluxes of the transient bump plus host contribution:
Filter delta T lambda_eff f_nu(lambda_eff) Vega mags
(days) (Ang) (microJy) (mag)
---------------------------------------------------------------------
F555W 77.33 5604.61 0.123 +/- 0.014 V = 26.173 +/- 0.118
F702W 76.58 7042.09 0.224 +/- 0.019 R = 25.264 +/- 0.092
F814W 77.25 8149.18 0.294 +/- 0.020 I = 24.762 +/- 0.073
---------------------------------------------------------------------
These fluxes and magnitudes have not been corrected for Galactic or host
extinction. The host galaxy contributes significantly to the flux at
these late times. We estimate this contribution from the host to be
f_nu(F555W) = (0.087 +/- 0.027) microJy, f_(F702W) = (0.127 +/- 0.026)
microJy and f_nu(F814W) = (0.209 +/- 0.059) microJy. More information
about the reductions may be found in:
http://www.astro.caltech.edu/~jsb/Papers/grb011121-paper1.ps
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 1276
Subject
GRB 011121: Third HST Epoch
Date
2002-03-19T07:14:41Z (24 years ago)
From
Shri Kulkarni at Caltech <srk@astro.caltech.edu>
S. R. Kulkarni, J. S. Bloom, P. A. Price, D. E. Reichart, Caltech
and B. Schmidt, Mount Stromlo Observatory report
on behalf of a larger collaboration:
Here we report on the third HST epoch (19 Dec 2001 UT) of WFPC2 images of
GRB 011121 (see GCN 1274). The third epoch was requested for observations
1 week after the second epoch but HST scheduling restrictions resulted
in the data being taken earlier.
We have performed PSF-fitting photometry on the transient and using
the prescription of Dolphin and Holtzman (D-H) we measure the following
magnitudes:
Epoch delta T Filter D-H Magnitude
(days)
---------------------------------------------
3 27.24 F555W 25.08 +/- 0.07
3 27.30 F702W 23.65 +/- 0.04
3 28.10 F814W 23.16 +/- 0.06
3 28.16 F850LP 22.72 +/- 0.06
---------------------------------------------
Note: (1) These magnitudes are measured magnitues and have not been
corrected for extinction. (2) The magnitude system here is the same
as that in GCN 1274.
We have converted these magnitudes to fluxes and the light curve can be
found at http://www.astro.caltech.edu/~der/1121lc_0.75mag.eps. We
assumed that the excess over the power law decay of the afterglow is
due to an underlying SN. To this end, we assumed assumed an SN 1998bw
template (corrected for extinction of A_V=0.19), redshifted to that of
the host galaxy of GRB 011121 (z=0.36, GCN 1152) and subject to the
estimated Galactic extinction of A_V=1.64 towards GRB 011121 (see GCN
1158