GRB 021004
GCN Circular 2240
Subject
GRB 021004: HST observations
Date
2003-05-21T11:37:48Z (22 years ago)
From
Andrew Levan at U.of Leicester <anl@star.le.ac.uk>
Andrew Levan (U. Leicester/STScI), Andrew Fruchter (STScI), Johan Fynbo
(U. Aarhus), Paul Vreeswijk (ESO) and Javier Gorosabel (IAA-CSIC/STScI)
report for the GOSH collaboration.
The field of GRB 021004 has been observed using the ACS/WFC on HST
in four epochs: the 7th, 11th and 22nd Oct and 26th Nov 2002.
A difference image of the last two epochs, which were dithered, reveals a
declining point source whose position is consistent within the astrometric
errors (~0."01) with the peak of the light in the later image. The source
is marginally resolved in that image (with a FWHM of 0".11, compared to a
point source FWHM of ~0."09) indicating a host galaxy directly underlying
the OT. This differs from the astrometry of Mirabal et al
(astro-ph/0303616) who find the OT position well offset from the host. As
the source lies on the peak of the light, and the object is only
marginally resolved, it is possible that the OT continues to contribute
significantly to the observed brightness even at the later epoch. Hence
the magnitude found for the source in November, F606W(AB)=24.3 +/- 0.1,
is an upper limit on the true brightness of the host galaxy.
We have scheduled late time observations of GRB 021004 which will enable
an accurate determination of both the host galaxy magnitude and the late
time decay of the afterglow.
Images of the field can be found at
http://www.stsci.edu/~fruchter/GRB/021004
GCN Circular 1717
Subject
GRB021004, late time optical observations
Date
2002-12-02T16:51:59Z (23 years ago)
From
Vladimir Sokolov at SAO RAS <sokolov@sao.ru>
T.A. Fatkhullin, V.N. Komarova, A.V. Moiseev (SAO RAS) report for the
larger GOSH collaboration:
The field of the GRB 021004 optical transient was observed with the SCORPIO
instrument at the 6-m telescope of SAO RAS. The images were taken
starting from 15:30 to 17:45 UT on Nov 29 and from 18.55 to 20.00 UT on Nov 30
under conditions of thin cirrus with seeing of about 1.2 arcsec in the first
night and 1.5 arcsec in the second one. The V, Rc and Ic filters were used.
The absolute astrometry was done relatively to USNO-B1.0 stars with internal
error of 0.3 arcsec. We detect an object which coincides with the position
of the optical transient (Henden et al. GCN #1592) within the astrometric
error. Photometric calibration was performed using 6 standards
(Henden et al. GCN #1630) in our FOV.
The results of the photometry are given below:
Data Filter Exp. OT mag. Aperture
------------------------------------------
29 Nov Rc 15x180s 24.36+/-0.18 3.5 arcsec
29 Nov V 5x450s 24.53+/-0.18 3.5 arcsec
30 Nov Ic 14x120s >23.9
------------------------------------------
At this stage it is not clearly whether the object is the pure host
galaxy. Further observations are planned.
Images can be seen at URL:
http://www.sao.ru/~sokolov/GRB/FOLLOWUP/GRB021004/GRB021004.html
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 1716
Subject
GRB021004 Chandra Observation
Date
2002-12-01T06:19:13Z (23 years ago)
From
Fiona Harrison at CalTech <fiona@srl.caltech.edu>
M. Sako & F. A. Harrison report on behalf of the Caltech-NRAO
collaboration:
We report a second TOO observation of GRB021004 taken with the Advanced CCD
Imaging Spectrometer (ACIS-S) onboard the Chandra X-ray Observatory. The
observation started at 17:35 on November 25 (52.229 days after the GRB) for a
total exposure time of 30.0 ksec. Ten counts were detected in a circular
region with a radius of 1 arcsec centered on the source position of GRB021004,
of which 1 - 2 photons are estimated to be background events. Assuming the
same power-law spectral index as that observed during an earlier Chandra observation
(GCN 1624), this corresponds to a 2 - 10 keV flux of (7.2 +/- 2.5) x 10^-16
erg/cm2/s. The source, therefore, has decayed with a characteristic power
law decay time slope of approximately -1.7 since the previous observation.
The data can be accessed through the Chandra Data Archive. We thank Harvey
Tananbaum for allocating Director's Discretionary Time and the Chandra X-ray
Center for implementing the obervation.
GCN Circular 1678
Subject
GRB021004: Near infrared spectroscopy
Date
2002-11-08T15:49:38Z (23 years ago)
From
Angelo Antonelli at Obs. Astro. di Roma <angelo@coma.mporzio.astro.it>
T. Giannini, B. Nisini, L.A. Antonelli, F. Fiore, and L. Stella
(INAF-Oss. Astronomico Roma) report:
"K band spectra of GRB021004 were obtained on October 05 2002 05:27 UT
using ISAAC at VLT/UT1. The observations cover the spectral range
1.8-2.5 micron at a resolution of R=450. The total exposure time was
of 3000 seconds. At the time of the observations the afterglow
magnitude was K~16.5 (Di Paola et al. GCN #1616).
A preliminary analysis of the spectra reveals no strong emission or
absorption features in the range 2.1-2.4 micron, where the signal to
noise is highest. In particular, no significant absorption or emission
line is detected at 2.18-2.19 micron where the Halpha transition
associated to the host galaxy (z=2.335 Moller et al. astro-ph
0210654) or to the strongest absorption system (z=2.328, Savaglio et
al. GCN #1633) should lie. The 3 sigma limit to the redshifted Halpha
absorption is of about 8 Angstrom."
This message may be quoted.
GCN Circular 1672
Subject
Spectropolarimetry of GRB021004
Date
2002-11-04T18:19:29Z (23 years ago)
From
Lifan Wang at LBL <lifan@panisse.lbl.gov>
Lifan Wang (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory),
Dietrich Baade(European Southern Observatory),
Peter Hoeflich, and J. Craig Wheeler (University of Texas, Austin) report:
"Spectropolarimetry of GRB021004 was obtained on Oct. 05 using the ESO-VLT
with FORS1. The spectral coverage is from 350 to 860 nm. Preliminary
reduction shows that the synthesized V-band polarimetry is consistent
with that reported by Covino et al. (GCN 1595) and Rol et al. (GCN1596).
The data are suggestive of polarization changes across
the Lyman-alpha absorption features at 401 and 404 nm, and increasing
degree of polarization blueward of 400 nm. "
GCN Circular 1661
Subject
GRB021004, late-time optical observations
Date
2002-10-29T01:12:31Z (23 years ago)
From
Peter Garnavich at U of Notre Dame <pgarnavi@miranda.phys.nd.edu>
P. Garnavich and J. Quinn (Notre Dame)
We observed the optical afterglow of GRB 021004
(Fox et al. GCN 1564) with the 1.8m Vatican Advanced
Technology Telescope beginning 2002 Oct 26.25 (UT).
Seven, 10 minute exposures in the R band were combined
and an unresolved source was detected within 0.2"
of the afterglow position. Assuming the star at
00:26:51.44 18:54:36.3 (2000) has a magnitude of
R=17.142 (Henden GCN 1630) we find the afterglow
brightness to be R=23.39+/-0.12. Combining the
Williams, Lindsay, & Milne (GCN 1652) observation with
the VATT image provides a power-law decay index of -1.7
between one and three weeks after the burst. This is
significantly steeper than the "average" decay index
between 0.4 and 3 days after the burst (Holland et al.
GCN 1597) and may indicate a final break in the light
curve. Although, the odd variability of GRB 021004 makes
this conclusion uncertain.
This note can be cited
GCN Circular 1654
Subject
GRB 021004: optical observations
Date
2002-10-25T13:44:47Z (23 years ago)
From
Alexei Pozanenko at IKI, Moscow <apozanen@iki.rssi.ru>
E.A.Barsukova (SAO), V.P.Goranskij (Sternberg Institute),
G.M.Beskin (SAO), V.L.Plokhotnichenko (SAO), A.S.Pozanenko (IKI).
We have observed GRB 021004 on October 8, 2002 four days after the burst,
using 1-m Zeiss telescope and CCD with Rc filter under good seeing
conditions. Five 20-min exposures were taken in the time interval between
20:49:56 and 22:35:14 UT. Object is seen near the frame limit in each of
these frames. The photometry and astrometry of images were performed. The
sum of all frames (total exposure is 100 minutes) gives the magnitude of OT
Rc = 20.9 +/- 0.3
relative to comparison star by Fox (GCN 1564) with Henden's (GCN 1630)
calibration magnitude of 15.538 Rc.
The astrometry of all the frames taken both on October, 4 (GCN 1606) and
October, 8 shows that the image of the object is displaced by 0".5 West on
October, 8 relative to that on October, 4. The accuracy of the astrometry is
0".2. One may suggest that the displacement results from influence of a host
galaxy.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 1652
Subject
GRB021004: Optical Observations
Date
2002-10-24T06:39:12Z (23 years ago)
From
Grant Williams at Steward Observatory <gwilliams@as.arizona.edu>
G. Williams (MMTO/SAO), K. Lindsay (Clemson University), P. Milne (LANL)
We observed the optical afterglow of GRB021004 (Fox et al., GCN 1564) with
the Steward Observatory 90-inch Bok Telescope. We obtained 8 x 300s
exposures in each of the B, V, R, and I bands. Observations began at
04:19:49 UT, and ended at 07:39:15 UT, on 12 October 2002 (T + 7.67 - 7.82
days). Aperture photometry was performed on the coadded images and the
results were calibrated utilizing standards reported by Henden et al., GCN
1583. The following preliminary results were obtained:
B = 22.60 +- 0.11 (12 Oct 07:18 UT)
V = 21.95 +- 0.07 (12 Oct 06:23 UT)
R = 21.47 +- 0.09 (12 Oct 04:41 UT)
I = 21.23 +- 0.18 (12 Oct 05:31 UT)
This report may be cited.
GCN Circular 1645
Subject
GRB 021004: VRI observations at TNG: possible break
Date
2002-10-19T10:14:00Z (23 years ago)
From
Stefano Covino at Brera Astronomical Observatory <covino@merate.mi.astro.it>
Malesani D., Stefanon M., Covino S., Ghisellini G. (INAF-OAB), Lazzati D.,
Rossi E. (IOA, Cambridge, UK), Fugazza D., Guerra J.C., Pedani M. (INAF-TNG),
Masetti N. (IASF-CNR), Pian E. (INAF-OATs), on behalf of a larger Italian
collaboration, report:
On Oct ~16.9 UT, we observed the optical counterpart of GRB 021004 (Shirasaki
et al., GCN 1565; Fox, GCN 1564) using the 3.6m TNG telescope in the Canary
Islands; observations were performed with V (20 min), R (9 min) and I (15
min) filters under mediocre conditions (seeing 1.5-1.8 arcsec, thin clouds).
With respect to the comparison star used by Fox and calibrated by Henden (GCN
1583), the source has the following magnitudes:
UT Band Mag Error
--------------------------
16.979 I 21.65 0.12
16.942 R 22.38 0.20
16.962 V 22.49 0.07
The object is quite faint in our images. Actually, it lies about ~0.7 mag
below the powerlaw extrapolation of the previously published data (R band),
if we include the three early-time data points of Fox (t < 20 min). If
instead we let the powerlaw fit to begin ~2 hours after the trigger, there is
no disagreement. A light curve with the relevant fits is reported at
http://www.merate.mi.astro.it/~malesani/GRB/021004 .
If indeed a break has occured between Oct 10 and Oct 17 (6 to 13 days after
GRB), this is in agreement with the prediction of GCN 1607.
Further observation are encouraged to assess the nature of this break.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 1638
Subject
GRB021004: Optical Observations
Date
2002-10-16T20:03:06Z (23 years ago)
From
Kevin Lindsay at Clemson U <jlkevin@clemson.edu>
Kevin Lindsay, Dieter H. Hartmann, Keith Davis,
Mark Leising (Clemson University)
We have observed the optical afterglow of GRB021004,
originally reported by Fox et al., GCN 1564, with the
SARA 0.9m telescope at KPNO. We obtained 16 300s
exposures in the Johnson R band filter. Observations
began at 06:46:17UT, and ended at 08:09:02UT, on October
9th. The observations were carried out under good seeing
conditions. Aperature photometry was performed, and
calibrated utilizing standards reported by Henden et al.,
GCN 1583.
We find a mean R magnitude of 21.2 +- 0.2
More information on the SARA Observatory can be found
at http://www.saraobservatory.org/.
This report may be cited.
GCN Circular 1635
Subject
GRB 021004: optical spectroscopy on Oct 11
Date
2002-10-14T19:12:38Z (23 years ago)
Edited On
2024-11-18T09:53:21Z (a year ago)
From
Alberto Castro-Tirado at Inst.de Astro. de Andalucia <ajct@iaa.es>
Edited By
Judith Racusin at NASA/GSFC <judith.racusin@nasa.gov> on behalf of Leo P. Singer at NASA/GSFC <leo.p.singer@nasa.gov>
A. J. Castro-Tirado, E. Pérez, J. Gorosabel (IAA-CSIC,
Granada), J. M. Castro Cerón (ROA, San Fernando),
M. Andersen (AIP, Potsdam), J. Hjorth (Univ. of Copenhagen),
E. Rol, R. Wijers (Univ. of Amsterdam), A. Fruchter
(STScI, Baltimore), S. Klose (TLS, Tautenburg),
J. Greiner (MPE, Garching) and E. Pian (OAT-INAF, Trieste)
on behalf of the GRACE Collaboration
report:
"We have obtained a 7200-s spectrum with the FORS1
spectrograph at the ESO's 8.2-m VLT3 telescope at
Paranal on Oct 11.125-11.231 UT. The range is 3500-
5700 A with a resolution of about 1 A/pix.
We confirm the detection of the Ly-alpha (1215.7 A)
emission line plus the C IV (1548,2 A, 1550.8 A)
absorption line system at a redshift z = 2.327 (GCN
1605). The Al II (1670 A) absorption line (GCN 1618)
is detected as well at the same redshift.
We also detect another two absorption line systems at
z = 2.297 and z = 2.321 on the basis of C IV (1548,2 A,
1550.8 A) lines. The latter system is also detected in
Si IV (1393.8, 1402.8). These two systems are consistent
with those reported by Salamanca et al. (GCN 1611) and
Savaglio et al. (GCN 1633).
The flux of the Ly-alpha line (1.9e-16 erg/cm2/s/A) is
comparable with the one measured by Keck (GCN 1620),
i.e. the Lyman-alpha flux is constant and we conclude that
arises from the GRB 021004 host galaxy, at z = 2.327."
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 1633
Subject
GRB021004: High-resolution optical spectroscopy
Date
2002-10-14T14:30:23Z (23 years ago)
From
Angelo Antonelli at Obs. Astro. di Roma <angelo@coma.mporzio.astro.it>
S. Savaglio (INAF-OAR and JHU), F. Fiore, G. Israel, G. Marconi,
L.A. Antonelli, A. Fontana, L. Stella, A. Di Paola, G. Stratta (INAF-OAR),
S. Covino, G. Chincarini, G. Ghisellini, P. Saracco, F. Zerbi (INAF-OABrera),
D. Lazzati (Cambridge, UK), R. Perna (CfA), M. Vietri (Univ. Roma Tre),
F. Frontera (Univ. di Ferrara), S. Mereghetti (CNR-IASF),
E.J.A. Meurs (Dunsink Obs.) and N. Kawai (Titech, RIKEN) report:
"Starting on October 05 2002 01:37 UT we have obtained high resolution
spectra (R=50,000, 6 km/s in the observer frame) of the optical
afterglow of GRB021004 (Fox et al., GCN #1564) using UVES at VLT. The
observations cover the full spectral range 3200-9800 Angstrom, in good
seeing conditions. At the time of the observations the afterglow
magnitude was R~18.6 and B~19.0.
A preliminary analysis of the first hour of observation reveals
several absorption lines associated with at least 4 metal systems
(also see Salamanca et al., GCN #1611