GRB 030323
GCN Circular 2006
Subject
GRB 030323: Gemini South VRI obsevations.
Date
2003-03-29T23:26:48Z (23 years ago)
Edited On
2024-11-18T10:09:25Z (a year ago)
From
Jose Maria Castro Ceron at STSciInst <josemari@alumni.nd.edu>
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>
José María Castro Cerón (STScI),
Javier Gorosabel (IAA-CSIC/STScI),
Andrew S. Fruchter (STScI),
Andrew J. Levan (U. Leicester) and
James E. Rhoads (STScI),
on behalf of a larger collaboration, report:
"We have performed VRI band observartions of the optical afterglow (GCN
1949) of the GRB 030323 (H2460; GCN 1956). For each band 30 x 45 s images
were obtained with the Gemini South 8.1 m Telescope (+Acquisition Camera),
as follows:
BAND | UT MAR 2003 | MAG | ERROR(*)
-------------------------------------------
V | 27.135--27.161 | 23.04 | +/-0.03
R | 27.166--27.186 | 22.27 | +/-0.04
I | 27.186--27.205 | 21.78 | +/-0.05
-------------------------------------------
* Only statistical error.
The photometric calibration is based on the star located at
RA(J2000) = 11h 06m 08.82s, DEC(J2000) = -21° 46' 37.5", which has been
fixed at V = 18.97, R = 18.28 and I = 17.71 (GCN 1948).
The coadded R band image can be found at:
http://www.stsci.edu/~josemari/GRB/GRB030323/grb030323.gemini.R.gif
This message may be cited."
GCN Circular 1973
Subject
GRB030323 optical observations
Date
2003-03-28T06:37:56Z (23 years ago)
From
Gianluca Masi at Bellatrix Astronomical Obs <gianluca@bellatrixobservatory.org>
G. Masi (University of Rome "Tor Vergata" and European Southern Observatory,
Chile), B. L. Jensen, J. Hjorth (Copenhagen University) and R. Michelsen
(Astronomical Observatory, Copenhagen) report:
Further to GCN 1960, we performed additional photometry of the OT initially
reported by Gilmore at al. (GCN 1949). The Danish 1.54m telescope (La Silla)
+ DFOSC CCD camera were used to grab three, 360s R-band images; summing them
we obtained the following Rc magnitudes (based on GCN 1948):
Mar. 26, 00:54 UT 21.3 Rc
Mar. 27, 00:50 UT 21.6 Rc
Mar. 28, 03:45 UT 22.8 Rc
(Errors around 0.2 mag)
This message can be cited
GCN Circular 1970
Subject
Possible GRB030323 localized by INTEGRAL
Date
2003-03-27T19:36:36Z (23 years ago)
From
INTEGRAL Shift Ops at INTEGRAL <shift@isdcmail.unige.ch>
V. Beckmann and S.E. Shaw on behalf of the INTEGRAL Science Data Center,
J.-P. Roques on behalf of the SPI instrument team, Sergei Molkov (IKI),
and the INTEGRAL Science Working team report the detection of a possible
GRB at 08:42:24 UTC on March 23, 2003.
The burst lasted about 5 seconds.
The preliminary position is RA 19h 49m, DEC -12deg 30' (J2000)
with an uncertainty of 2 degrees radius. The preliminary peak flux over
2 seconds is about 2 * 10^-7 ergs/cm**2/sec between 25 and 100 keV.
The burst has been detected by SPI at large off-axis angle (14.5
degrees), outside the field of view of IBIS.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 1968
Subject
GRB030323: Detection on 2003/03/24
Date
2003-03-27T18:35:44Z (23 years ago)
From
Michael Wood-Vasey at UC Berkeley/LBNL/SNfactory <wmwood-vasey@lbl.gov>
W. M. Wood-Vasey (LBNL/UCB), P. A. Price (RSAA/ANU), and D. Fox
(Caltech), using images obtained by R. Bambery, S. Pravdo, M. Hicks,
and K. Lawrence (Near-Earth Asteroid Tracking project, Jet Propulsion
Laboratory), report that an image taken with the Palomar 1.2-m
telescope on 2003 Mar 24.27 UT shows the optical transient of Gilmore
et. al (GCN #1949) at a unfiltered magnitude of 18.83 +0.09-0.08. Two
previous Mar 24 images taken under poor conditions do not show the OT:
UT Date Unfiltered Mag
----------------------------------------
2003 Mar 24.19 [ 16.59
2003 Mar 24.23 [ 16.26
2003 Mar 24.27 18.83 +0.09 -0.08
Magnitudes are calibration against >300 USNO-A V1.0 R-band stars in
the 0.25 sq. degree field of the images. We clarify here that the
limiting magnitudes quoted in GCN #1957 were calculated in the same
manner.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 1966
Subject
GRB 030323: SARA Optical Observations
Date
2003-03-26T22:52:11Z (23 years ago)
From
Kevin Lindsay at Clemson U <jlkevin@clemson.edu>
K. Lindsay, D. H. Hartmann, L. Harris, A. Manning (Clemson University),
M. Lopez-Morales (UNC Chapil Hill), M. Castelaz (PARI)
We have observed the optical afterglow of GRB030323,
originally reported by Henden et al. GCN 1949, with the
SARA 0.9m telescope at KPNO. We obtained 29, 300s
exposures in the Johnson R band filter. Observations
began at 03:32:56UT, and ended at 07:22:56UT, on March
25th. The obsevations were carried out under good seeing
conditions. Aperture photometry was performed, and
calibrated utilizing standards reported by Henden et al.,
GCN 1948.
We find a mean R magnitude of 20.6 +- 0.1.
More information on the SARA Observatory
can be found at http://www.saraobservatory.org/.
This report may be cited.
GCN Circular 1960
Subject
GRB030323: V, R, I photometry
Date
2003-03-26T04:20:54Z (23 years ago)
From
Gianluca Masi at Bellatrix Astronomical Obs <gianluca@bellatrixobservatory.org>
G. Masi (University of Rome "Tor Vergata" and European Southern Observatory,
Chile), B. L. Jensen, J. Hjorth (Copenhagen University) and R. Michelsen
(Astronomical Observatory, Copenhagen) report:
We imaged the field around the afterglow candidate reported by Gilmore at
al. for GRB030323 (GCN 1949