GRB 030329
GCN Circular 1985
Subject
GRB 030329: Optical afterglow candidate
Date
2003-03-29T13:27:28Z (22 years ago)
From
Paul Price at RSAA, ANU <pap@mso.anu.edu.au>
B.A. Peterson and P.A. Price (RSAA, ANU) reports:
We have observed the error-circle of GRB 030329 with the SSO 40-inch
telescope in R-band. We identify a source that is not present on archival
images at approximate coordinates:
RA: 10:44:49.5 Dec: +21:31:23 (J2000)
This position is preliminary, with an estimated error of 5 arcsec.
Further observations are planned.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 1986
Subject
GRB 030329: OT candidate
Date
2003-03-29T13:43:32Z (22 years ago)
From
Ken ichi Torii at RIKEN <torii@crab.riken.go.jp>
K. Torii (RIKEN) report:
The entire error region of GRB 030329 (HETE trigger 2652) was
observed by the automated system at RIKEN (0.25-m f/6.8 reflector
equipped with unfiltered CCD AP6E). The observatin started at 2003
Mar. 29 12:52:09 UT and 60-s intergration is repeated.
We find a new bright source at position (R.A., Dec.) = (10 44 50.0,
+21 31 18) (J2000) (preliminary values with a formal error of 6
arcseconds in each coordinate). The object is about 13 mag (USNO-A2.0
red magnitude).
===
GCN Circular 1987
Subject
GRB 030329: Optical afterglow candidate
Date
2003-03-29T13:59:38Z (22 years ago)
From
Paul Price at RSAA, ANU <pap@mso.anu.edu.au>
P.A. Price and B.A. Peterson (RSAA, ANU) report:
A refined position for the optical afterglow candidate of GRB 030329 is:
RA: 10:44:50.0 Dec: 21:31:17.8 (J2000)
with an estimated error of 0.5 arcsec in each axis.
We estimate the afterglow candidate to be R ~ 12.4 mag (!!!).
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 1988
Subject
GRB 030329 follow-up
Date
2003-03-29T14:15:40Z (22 years ago)
From
Paul Price at RSAA, ANU <pap@mso.anu.edu.au>
P.A. Price (RSAA, ANU) reports:
Identification of the afterglow of GRB 030329 was performed through
clouds, with thunderstorms surrounding the mountain. Consequently, it
will not be possible to obtain a spectrum of this bright afterglow from
Australia. Perth observatory is also experiencing thunderstorms. We
encourage observations by Northern observatories to track the afterglow
lightcurve.
GCN Circular 1989
Subject
GRB 030329: Optical afterglow fading
Date
2003-03-29T14:31:43Z (22 years ago)
From
Makoto Uemura at U. of Kyoto, Astro. <uemura@kusastro.kyoto-u.ac.jp>
M. Uemura (Kyoto University) reports:
We have started observations of the field of GRB 030329 at 12:53:41
UT, and confirmed the bright afterglow candidate reported in GCN 1985
and 1986. We use 30-cm and 25-cm SC telescopes and unfiltered CCDs at
Kyoto, Japan.
In this one hour observation, our perliminary analysis revealed a
rapid fading of the object. From 12:53:41 UT to 13:51:01, the object
faded about 0.53 mag, which establishes that the bright candidate is
a genuine optical afterglow of GRB 030329.
GCN Circular 1994
Subject
GRB 030329: precise position from Kyoto images
Date
2003-03-29T17:19:44Z (22 years ago)
From
Hitoshi Yamaoka at Kyushu U., VSNET-GRB collab. <yamaoka@rc.kyushu-u.ac.jp>
M. Uemura (Kyoto U.), H. Yamaoka (Kyushu U.), R. Ishioka, and T. Kato
(Kyoto U.) report on behalf of VSNET-GRB collaboration:
The precise position for the optical afterglow candidate of GRB
030329 (GCN 1985, 1986, 1987, 1689) was derived from Kyoto images (GCN
1689) as (with mean error of measurements of nine images):
R.A.= 10h44m50s.030 +/- 0s.005, Decl. = +21d31'18".15 +/- 0".07.
On the DSS 2 B, R, and I images, there is no distinct source down to
the limiting magnitudes, which indicates the parent galaxy is more
than 8-9 mag dimmer of the OT at 76 minutes after explosion.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 1995
Subject
GRB 030329: Optical Afterglow Observations
Date
2003-03-29T17:35:46Z (22 years ago)
From
Eli Rykoff at Univ. of Michigan/ROTSE <erykoff@umich.edu>
Rykoff, E. S. and Smith, D. A. on behalf of the ROTSE collaboration report:
We have observed the full error box of GRB 030329 (HETE trigger 2652),
using the ROTSE-3A 0.45 meter telescope at Siding Springs Observatory,
Australia, starting March 29, 13:05:19 UT (1.46 hours after the burst).
Due to partly cloudy skies, our first usable image was taken at
13:08:45 UT. We initiated a sequence of 90 one-minute exposures,
interrupted by a brief spell of light rain.
We identify the bright counterpart reported by Price (1985) and Torii
(GCN 1986), at the following coordinates:
RA: 10 44 50.0 Dec: 21:31:17.8
Some of our detections (unfiltered, calibrated to USNO A2.0 R-band) are:
UT (start) Mag (USNO R-band)
13:08:48 12.88 +/- 0.01
13:19:15 12.96 +/- 0.02
13:35:25 13.11 +/- 0.01
15:34:38 13.90 +/- 0.02
15:45:16 14.05 +/- 0.03
We continued to follow the transient until it dropped below our
elevation cut.
A preliminary ROTSE lightcurve can be found at:
http://www.rotse.net/transients/grb030329/grb030329_lc0.ps
Please note that our magnitude errors fluctuated as clouds drifted
through the field of view.
GCN Circular 1996
Subject
RXTE detection of GRB 030329 afterglow
Date
2003-03-29T19:37:01Z (22 years ago)
From
Frank Marshall at GSFC <marshall@milkyway.gsfc.nasa.gov>
Marshall, F.E. and Swank, J.H. (NASA/GSFC) report:
RXTE detected the X-ray afterglow of GRB 030329
(HETE trigger 2652) during a 27 minute observation
that began about 4h51m after the burst at 16:28 UT
on March 29 . The flux was about 1.4e-10 ergs/s/cm**2
in the 2-10 keV band or about 0.007 times as bright as the Crab
Nebula. This is one of the brightest afterglows ever
detected with RXTE. The spectrum is well fit by a power law
model with a photon index of 2.0 and an upper limit
on absorption of 1e22 Nh/cm**2.
The X-ray flux was about 20% lower during
a second observation starting at 17:32 UT.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 1997
Subject
GRB030329 (=H2652): A Long, Extremely Bright GRB Localized by the HETE WXM and SXC
Date
2003-03-29T19:53:03Z (22 years ago)
From
Don Lamb at U.Chicago <lamb@oddjob.uchicago.edu>
R. Vanderspek, G. Crew, J. Doty, J. Villasenor, G. Monnelly, N. Butler,
T. Cline, J.G. Jernigan, A. Levine, F. Martel, E. Morgan, G. Prigozhin,
G. Azzibrouck, J. Braga, R. Manchanda, and G. Pizzichini, on behalf of
the HETE Operations and HETE Optical-SXC Teams;
G. Ricker, J-L Atteia, N. Kawai, D. Lamb, and S. Woosley on behalf of
the HETE Science Team;
T. Donaghy, M. Suzuki, Y. Shirasaki, C. Graziani, M. Matsuoka, T.
Tamagawa, K. Torii, T. Sakamoto, A. Yoshida, E. Fenimore, M. Galassi,
T. Tavenner, Y. Nakagawa, D. Takahashi, R. Satoh, and Y. Urata, on
behalf of the HETE WXM Team;
M. Boer, J-F Olive, J-P Dezalay, C. Barraud and K. Hurley on behalf
of the HETE FREGATE Team;
write:
At 11:37:14.67 UTC (41834.67 s UT) on 29 Mar 2003, the HETE FREGATE,
WXM, and SXC instruments detected event H2652, a long, extremely
bright GRB.
The burst triggered FREGATE in the 6-120 keV energy band. The burst
occurred outside of the effective FOV of the WXM Y-camera. Ground
analysis of the SXC data produced a localization that was reported in a
GCN Notice at 12:50:24 UT, 73 minutes after the burst. The SXC ground
localization SNR was 20. Further ground analysis of the SXC data has
provided an SXC localization that can be expressed as a 90% confidence
circle that is 2 arcminutes in radius and is centered at
SXC-Ground: RA = +10h 44m 50s, Dec = +21d 30' 54" (J2000).
The SXC localization is dominated by systematic errors, which are
larger than usual because the burst occurred at the edge of the SXC
FOV. (The error circle radius of 2 arcminutes reported in the GCN
Notice for H2652 did not include the larger systematic errors.)
Ground analysis of the WXM data produced a WXM localization. The WXM
ground localization SNR is > 20. The WXM localization can be expressed
as a 90% confidence rectangle that is 12 arcminutes in width and 2.25
degrees in length. The center of the rectangle lies at
WXM-Ground: RA = +10h 44m 24.7, Dec = +23d 20' 20" (J2000),
and its corners lie at
RA = +10h 44m 39.6s, Dec = +23d 29' 20",
RA = +10h 43m 53.5s, Dec = +23d 26' 35",
RA = +10h 44m 09.8s, Dec = +21d 11' 38",
RA = +10h 44m 55.9s, Dec = +21d 14' 17" (J2000).
The width of the WXM localization is dominated by systematic errors,
which are larger than usual because the burst occurred at the edge of
the WXM FOV. The WXM localization is a long, narrow strip because the
burst occurred at the edge of the WXM FOV in a region of the sky that
would have been viewed by the YB-camera, which is not operational.
The burst duration in the 30-400 keV band was > 25 s. The fluence of
the burst was ~1 x 10-4 ergs cm-2 and the peak flux over 1.2 s was > 7
x 10-6 ergs cm-2 s-1 (i.e., > 100 x Crab flux) in the same energy band.
A light curve and skymap for GRB030329 is provided at the following URL:
http://space.mit.edu/HETE/Bursts/GRB030329
[GCN OPS NOTE (29mar03): The "...on 28 Mar 2003,..." in the first line
was corrected to "...on 29 Mar 2003,...".]
GCN Circular 1998
Subject
GRB030329: Upper limits from recent and historical observations.
Date
2003-03-29T20:28:22Z (22 years ago)
From
Michael Wood-Vasey at UC Berkeley/LBNL/SNfactory <wmwood-vasey@lbl.gov>
GRB030329: Upper limits from recent and historical observations.
W. M. Wood-Vasey, P. Nugent, and B. C. Lee, Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory, using images obtained by R. Bambery, S. Pravdo, M. Hicks,
and K. Lawrence (Near-Earth Asteroid Tracking project, Jet Propulsion
Laboratory), report recent and historical upper limits for the optical
transient for GRB 20030329 (GCN #1985, 1986, 1987) using the position
of Uemura et. al (GCN #1949) from images taken with the Palomar Oschin
1.2-m and Haleakala MSSS 1.2-m telescopes during the previous two
years:
Limiting Unfiltered Mag
UT Date ( @ S/N = 3) Telescope
--------------------------------------------------------------------
2001 Mar 13.60, 13.61 [ 17.58 Haleakala
2002 Jan 8.46, 8.47, 8.49 [ 20.31 Haleakala
2002 Jan 14.44, 14.45, 14.46 [ 20.26 Haleakala
2002 Jan 21.46, 21.47, 21.48 [ 21.66 Palomar
2002 Feb 3.54, 3.55, 3.57 [ 20.86 Palomar
2002 Feb 13.56, 13.57 [ 18.96 Palomar
2002 Apr 1.27, 1.29, 1.31 [ 21.57 Palomar
2003 Jan 18.50, 18.52, 18.54 [ 20.84 Palomar
2003 Feb 23.50, 23.51, 23.52 [ 20.54 Haleakala
2003 Mar 1.51, 1.52, 1.53 [ 19.89 Haleakala
2003 Mar 23.13, 23.15, 23.17 [ 21.61 Palomar
Magnitudes are calibration against 300 USNO-A V1.0 R-band stars in
the 0.25 sq. degree field of the images.
A co-addition of these images shows nothing at this location to a
combined limiting magnitude of 22.28 (S/N = 3).
The co-addition is available at:
http://supernova.lbl.gov/~wwoodvas/GRB/#GRB20030329
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 1999
Subject
GRB 030329: OT B and R photometry, decline rate
Date
2003-03-29T21:12:43Z (22 years ago)
From
Avishay Gal-Yam at Tel Aviv U, Israel <avishay@wise1.tau.ac.il>
A. Gal-Yam, E. O. Ofek, D. Polishook and E.M. Leibowitz
(Wise observatory, TAU) report:
We are observing the OT of GRB 030329 (Peterson & Price, GCN 1985)
using the Wise observatory 1m telescope + SITe CCD camera, starting
March 29, 17:15 UT (5.6 hours after the burst). Large number
of 300 s B, 120 s V and 120 s R-band frames are being obtained under
highly variable conditions, with passing clouds.
We detect the OT on numerous B, V and R-band images. A rough calibration
using nearby bright USNO A-1 stars gives R~14.3 and B~15 for the OT. We
can also estimate the decline rate to be about 0.3 mag/hour in the R-band,
from the first two hours of data. Further data acquisition and analysis
are underway.
GCN Circular 2000
Subject
GRB 030329, R-band observations
Date
2003-03-29T21:28:43Z (22 years ago)
From
Sylvio Klose at TLS Tautenburg <klose@tls-tautenburg.de>
S. Klose, C. Hoegner, J. Greiner (Thueringer Landessternwarte Tautenburg)
report:
We observed the field of GRB 030329 (HETE trigger #2652) with the
Tautenburg Schmidt telescope equipped with the prime focus CCD camera
(2k x 2k). Inspite of terrible weather conditions the afterglow
discovered by Peterson & Price (GCN 1985) and Torii (GCN 1986) is
detected in R.
Based on a comparison with the DSS2 red we can only provide a very
rough estimate of the R-band magnitude of the afterglow. The
brightness of the source is approximately R=14.8 +/- 0.5 mag. We do not
believe that we can improve the accuracy of the photometry
substantially. The quality of the images is really very bad. This
information should nevertheless help observers to plan further
observations.
GCN Circular 2001
Subject
GRB 030329: optical observations
Date
2003-03-29T21:44:47Z (22 years ago)
From
Rodion Burenin at IKI, Moscow <rodion@hea.iki.rssi.ru>
R. Burenin, D. Denissenko, M. Pavlinsky, R. Sunyaev, O. Terekhov,
A. Tkachenko (IKI); Z. Aslan, K. Uluc, I. Khamitov (TUG); U. Kiziloglu,
A. Alpar, A. Baykal (METU); I. Bikmaev, N. Sakhibullin, V. Suleymanov (KSU)
report:
Error box of GRB030329 (HETE Trigger #2652) was observed with 1.5-m
Russian-Turkish Telescope RTT150 at Bakyrlytepe (TUBITAK National
Observatory, Turkey) started at Mar 29.744 UT, appr. 6 hours after the burst.
We confirm the presence of the optical transient (OT) reported by Peterson
and Price (GCN 1985). In the beginning of our run the afterglow appear to
have the following magnitudes: B=14.99, V=14.46, R=14.12, I=13.60, and is
fading at a rate appr. 0.18 mag per hour in every filter. At 29.794 the OT
has magnitudes: B=15.19, V=14.65, R=14.34, I=13.82. We will continue our
observations as long as it will be possible.
The absolute fluxes will be calibrated more accurately. The light curves
will follow.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2002
Subject
GRB030329:optical observations by MASTER
Date
2003-03-29T22:01:01Z (22 years ago)
From
Vladimir Lipunov at Moscow State U/Krylov Obs <gcncirc@observ.inetcomm.ru>
ITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT
V. Lipunov, A.Krylov, V.Kornilov, G.Borisov, D.Kuvshinov, A.Belinski,
I.Chilingarian, M.Kuznetsov, S.Potanin, V.Vitrischak, G.Antipov
Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Alexsandr Krylov Observatory, Moscow
We are observing the OT of GRB 030329 in R-band with MASTER system
(280 mm, http://observ.pereplet.ru). We began observations at 17:15UT
(~5h30m after GRB time).
Optical source (about 13.6 in R) was detected at the position given
in Circ 1985 in the beginning of observations. At 20:20UT (~8h40m after
GRB
time) magnitude became more than one magnitude fainter and it was about
14.8 in R. The OT seems to become fainter very slowly.
At present we have about 100 images of the OT. These images are
being processed.
These are preliminary results.
GCN Circular 2003
Subject
GRB030329 optical observations
Date
2003-03-29T22:17:09Z (22 years ago)
From
Adalberto Piccioni at Astronomy, Bologna U. <piccioni@ermione.bo.astro.it>
C. Bartolini, A. Guarnieri, A. Piccioni (Bologna University),
G. Gavazzi (Milano-Bicocca University), R. Gualandi (Bologna
Astronomical Observatory) and G. Pizzichini (IASF-CNR Bologna)
report:
UBVRI photometry, for a total of 13 frames, of GRB030329 has
been obtained from March 29.8090 to 29.8139 with the 152 cm
Loiano telescope.
Data analysis is in progress.
A finding chart in R light can be retrieved by sftp using
hostname : ermione.bo.astro.it
username: publicGRB
password: GRB_bo
GCN Circular 2004
Subject
GRB 030329, R-band observations, supplement
Date
2003-03-29T22:39:34Z (22 years ago)
From
Sylvio Klose at TLS Tautenburg <klose@tls-tautenburg.de>
S. Klose, C. Hoegner (Thueringer Landessternwarte Tautenburg),
J. Greiner (MPE Garching)
report:
We forgot to mention that our reported R-band data point refers to an
observing run which was performed 19:50 - 20:00 UT.
S.K. apologizes for this mistake.
GCN Circular 2005
Subject
GRB030329: Optical observations
Date
2003-03-29T23:08:58Z (22 years ago)
From
Vasilij Rumjantsev at CrAO <rum@crao.crimea.ua>
V.Rumyantsev, E.Pavlenko, Y.Efimov, K.Antoniuk, O.Antoniuk, N.Primak (CrAO)
and A.Pozanenko
(IKI) report:
We have observed the GRB030329 (HETE #2652) and OT of the GRB found by
B.A. Peterson and P.A. Price (GCN 1985) with Cassegrain 38-cm telescope of
CrAO.
Several 180 sec. exposures of R (Johnson) filter were obtained.
The photometry of the OT in respect to the star of USNO �2.0 - 1050-6351075
(the star A in the figure in
http://grb.rssi.ru/GRB030329/030329_030329_at64.gif) is following:
Star A (USNO �2.0 - 1050-6351075)
RA =10 44 54.49
DEC=+21 34 29.8
R=14.00 B=14.90
JD Hel = 52728.2293 delR=0.17
.2318 delR=0.26
.2349 delR=0.23
.2397 delR=0.27
The figure of the OT can be found in
http://grb.rssi.ru/GRB030329/030329_030329_at64.gif
Preliminary results of photometry with AZT-11 telescope of CrAO are
following:
start (JD) 52728.26714
end (JD) 52728.31593
Date JD U B V R I
52728.2932 14.25 14.95 14.49 14.02 13.65
52728.2932 0.018 0.019 0.030 0.017 0.027 error
CrAO telescopes will continue to monitor the OT.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2009
Subject
GRB 030329: Upper limit from 5.6 hours before trigger
Date
2003-03-30T00:17:01Z (22 years ago)
From
James Wren at LANL <jwren@nis.lanl.gov>
J. Wren and W. T. Vestrand report on behalf of the RAPTOR team:
While the location of HETE-2 trigger 2652 was below our horizon at
the time of the GCN notice, we did obtain observations earlier in
the evening of the GRB field with one of our wide-field RAPTOR sky
monitors. The observation nearest to the time of the burst was taken
at 05:58:39.56 UT, 5.64 hours before the event. This image does not
show the optical counterpart to a 3-sigma limiting magnitude of
Rc=12.8. Unfortunately, the weather degraded rapidly later in the
night, preventing further observations of this field.
GCN Circular 2010
Subject
GRB 030329: visual observations
Date
2003-03-30T00:33:03Z (22 years ago)
From
Arto Oksanen at Nyrola Obs., Finland <oksanen@nyrola.jklsirius.fi>
A. Oksanen (Nyrola Observatory), R. Henriksson and M. Tuukkanen (the Finnish
Deep Sky section of Astronomical Association Ursa) report:
We observed the optical afterglow of GRB030329 reported by Peterson and
Price (GCN 1985) visually about 8 hours after the burst.
M. Tuukkanen observed the OT In Pornainen, Finland with a 0.63 m Newton
telescope for about one hour starting March 29, 2003 19:30 UT.
He reported it as a faint starlike object seen easily with
direct vision. He did not see any flickering or distinct color.
R. Henriksson was observing in Orivesi, Finland with his 0.30 m Newton
telescope using 200x magnification at 20:05 UT. He reported the object
stellar and faint, visible only with averted vision. His scanned sketch
with notes is available on web:
http://archive.ermiksson.net/record.php?id=4112
Both observers estimated the visual magnitude as 14.3 by using the 14.2
magnitude GSC 1434:322 star North of OT as reference.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2011
Subject
GRB 030329: Optical pre-Imaging
Date
2003-03-30T00:49:05Z (22 years ago)
From
Josh Bloom at Harvard/CFA <jbloom@cfa.harvard.edu>
GRB 030329: Optical pre-Imaging
C. Blake (Princeton) and J. S. Bloom (CfA) report:
"Using a signal-to-noise weighted stack of 50 NEAT images (taken from
1997-2002), we do not detect a counterpart at the position of the
transient afterglow of GRB 030329 (Price & Peterson; GCN #1985). The
images were acquired by R. Bambery, S. Pravdo, M. Hicks, and K. Lawrence
(Near-Earth Asteroid Tracking Project, Jet Propulsion Laboratory). We
therefore estimate the upper limit to the brightness of any host galaxy as
R=23.1 (2 sigma) or R=22.5 (3 sigma). This result is consistent with the
somewhat more shallow limits reported in Wood-Vasey et al. (GCN #1998).
The absence of a host to such magnitude levels suggests a redshift of z >~
0.2, despite the extreme brightness of the early afterglow.
Within 7.5 arcseconds of the position of the OT, we find two sources
that are marginally detected (at the R=22.5 mag level):
------------------------------------------------------------------
RA(J2000) DEC Source-->OT
-------------------------------------------------------------------
A: 10:44:49.776, +21:31:16.49 3.54" East, 1.66" North d=3.91"
B: 10:44:50.065 +21:31:10.77 -0.49" East, 7.38" North, d=7.40"
Positional errors relative to the USNO-B1.0 catalog are 0.5". These
sources are shown in an image linked from the webpage given below.
Photometric calibration of the stacked image was performed using the
USNO-B1.0 catalog. Some photometric secondary stars in the field are
listed below:
RA(J2000) DEC R B
mag mag
-----------------------------------------------------
10:44:55.17 +21:28:11.3 17.69 18.48
10:44:43.40 +21:27:58.4 18.41 19.46
10:44:44.06 +21:27:18.5 18.52 20.47
10:44:53.61 +21:30:11.6 17.45 18.41
10:45:04.39 +21:29:56.1 18.22 20.37
10:44:55.67 +21:31:22.2 19.08 19.95
10:44:54.97 +21:31:42.7 18.51 20.36
10:44:48.68 +21:31:39.8 18.95 19.30
10:44:42.00 +21:32:31.7 15.08 18.18
10:44:50.44 +21:32:05.8 16.61 17.99
10:44:59.44 +21:31:43.9 18.07 19.84
-------------------------------------------------------
Finally, we note an object at (J2000) 10:44:55 +21:31:05.9, which
appeared in the DSS-II image, and is listed in the USNO-B1.0 as being
R=19.60, was detected at only R=21.9 in our stacked image."
A stacked image from NEAT that includes the WCS in the header may be
found at:
http://astro.princeton.edu/~cblake/030329.html
This message can be cited.
GCN Circular 2012
Subject
GRB 030329: still bright
Date
2003-03-30T03:03:17Z (22 years ago)
From
Krzysztof Z. Stanek at CfA <kstanek@cfa.harvard.edu>
P. Martini (OCIW), P. Berlind, K. Z. Stanek (CfA) and P. Garnavich
(Notre Dame):
We imaged the optical afterglow of GRB 030329 (Peterson & Price: GCN
1985; Torii: GCN 1986) with the Magellan 6.5-m Clay telescope and
LDSS2 imaging/spectrograph on March 30 UT 01:15 (13.6 hours after the
burst). We also obtained imaging data with the FLWO 1.2-m telescope.
The R-band magnitude is estimated to be 15.1 assuming star "A" is
R=16.2 (see
http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~kstanek/grb030329.ps).
Thus the OT continues to be very bright. We should note that the
several fairly bright objects closest to the OT are clearly resolved
in our images and should not be used for relative photometry. "A" and
"B" appear to be stellar at ~1.3'' seeing.
The foreground reddening from Schlegel et al. (1998) is E(B-V)=0.025.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2013
Subject
GRB 030329, optical spectroscopy
Date
2003-03-30T03:19:19Z (22 years ago)
From
Peter Garnavich at U of Notre Dame <pgarnavi@miranda.phys.nd.edu>
P. Martini (OCIW), P. Garnavich (Notre Dame) and K.Z. Stanek (CfA)
Spectra of the optical afterglow of GRB 030329 (Peterson & Price,
GCN 1985; Torii: GCN 1986) were obtained with the
Magellan 6.5-m Clay telescope and LDSS2 imaging/spectrograph
starting at March 30.06 (UT). The spectra cover the wavelength
range of 4000 to 9000 Ang. with a resolution of 13 Ang. FWHM.
Preliminary analysis of the spectum of this bright GRB afterglow
shows a smooth blue continuum with no significant absorption
features. The only obvious feature is an unresolved emission
line at 5852 Ang. If this is [OII] emission from the host galaxy,
then the redshift is z=0.57. Further analysis is continuing.
This message may be cited.
[GCN OPS NOTE(02apr03): The date int he first line was corrected
from "GRB 030328" to "GRB 030329".]
GCN Circular 2014
Subject
GRB 030329: Radio Observations
Date
2003-03-30T03:35:26Z (22 years ago)
From
Edo Berger at Caltech <ejb@astro.caltech.edu>
E. Berger, A. M. Soderberg (Caltech) and D. A. Frail (NRAO) report on
behalf of a larger collaboration:
"We observed the position of the optical afterglow (GCN 1985) of GRB
030329 (GCN 1997) with the VLA on March 30.06 UT. We detect a 3.5 mJy
source at 8.46 GHz coincident with the OT. This is the brightest radio
afterglow detected to date, consistent with the unusual brightness of the
optical (e.g. GCNs 1986 & 1987) and X-ray (GCN 1996) counterparts, as well
as the prompt emission (GCN 1997)"
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2015
Subject
GRB030329: optical spectroscopy with the TNG
Date
2003-03-30T05:56:08Z (22 years ago)
From
Angelo Antonelli at Obs. Astro. di Roma <angelo@coma.mporzio.astro.it>
R. Della Ceca, T. Maccacaro (INAF-OABrera), D. Fugazza, M. Pedani,
M. Cecconi (TNG), F. Fiore, L.A. Antonelli (INAF-OAR), S. Covino
(INAF-OABrera), E. Pian (INAF-OATs), N. Masetti (IASF-CNR) report:
"Starting on March 30 2003 00:43:40 UT we have obtained low resolution
(R~1000) spectra of the optical afterglow of GRB030329 (Peterson &
Price GCN #1985, Torii, GCN #1986) using DOLORES at TNG. Observations
consisted of two exposures of 15 min each the second obtained at 2.75hh
after the first, and cover the full spectral range 3800-8000 Angstrom,
in relatively good seeing conditions (1.5"). At the time of the
observations the afterglow magnitude was R~15-16 (e.g. Martini et al.
GCN #2012).
A preliminary analysis of the spectra reveals no strong absorption
features. A more detailed analysis is needed to search for faint
absorption lines. A faint emission line at 5846 Angstrom (see Martini
et al. GCN# 2013) is present in the later spectra, when the afterglow
emission was less strong. If this is [OII] emission from the host
galaxy, then the redshift is z=0.568.
We detect a strong spectral variability between the first spectrum,
when the afterglow was extremely blue, and the second spectrum,
obtained starting from 03:25:35 UT.
We are particularly grateful to the TNG staff for their remarkable
support to these observations.
This message may be cited."
GCN Circular 2016
Subject
GRB030329 optical observations
Date
2003-03-30T06:34:21Z (22 years ago)
From
Gianluca Masi at Bellatrix Astronomical Obs <gianluca@bellatrixobservatory.org>
G. Masi (University of Rome " Tor Vergata" and ESO),
F. Mallia, U. Tagliaferri (Osservatorio Astronomico di Campo Catino, Italy),
B. L. Jensen and J. Hjorth (University of Copenhagen),
M. I. Andersen (Astrophysikalisches Institut Potsdam) report:
We imaged the field around the OT located by Peterson & Price (GCN 1985) and
Torii (GCN 1986), using the Campo Catino Automated Telescope (0.4-m f/8) +
CCD (unfiltered, but peaking in the red part of the spectrum) on Mar 29.9621
UT. The source was bright and our astrometry provided a position in
excellent agreement with that in GCN 1994 (Uemura et al.). Using the R
magnitudes for the USNO SA2.0 stars in the field, we obtained a preliminary
magnitude of CR = 14.5.
This message can be cited.
GCN Circular 2017
Subject
GRB 030329: Optical decay and synthesis
Date
2003-03-30T07:57:04Z (22 years ago)
From
Paul Price at RSAA, ANU <pap@mso.anu.edu.au>
P.A. Price, B.P. Peterson and B.P. Schmidt (RSAA, ANU) report:
Synthesis of observations from Rykoff et al. (GCN #1995), Gal-Yam et
al. (GCN #1999), Martini et al. (GCN #2012) and from the SSO 40-inch
(GCN #1987) yeilds the following decay:
R/mag ~ 15.8 + 2.4 log (t/days)
with corresponding power-law index alpha = 0.97 +/- 0.03.
Hence, though the afterglow is bright, the decay is not unusually
shallow (eg, 010222 had alpha1 ~ 0.80).
The spectral index, calculated from the B-I colour from Burenin et
al. (GCN #2001) and Rumyantsev et al. (GCN #2005) is beta ~ 1.2.
Using the measured redshift (Martini et al., GCN #2013; Della Ceca et al.,
GCN #2015), optical decay and spectral index, we calculate the R-band
absolute magnitude of the optical afterglow for t=1 day in the source
frame, M_R,1 = -26.7 mag. This is therefore the most intrinsically bright
optical afterglow observed to date (with 000301C and 000418 tied for
second at M_R,1 = -26.1 mag). The low redshift and the large intrinsic
brightness combined to produce an optical afterglow with a large apparent
brightness.
The redshift of z=0.57 and measured fluence (Vanderspek et al., GCN #1997)
implies an isotropic-equivalent energy release of 1.1 x 10^53 erg (30-400
keV). The Frail et al. "standard energy" result implies a jet-break time
of around 4 days. At this time, the afterglow should be R ~ 17.3 mag.
We encourage polarimetric observations to be made on this timescale to
constrain the jet dynamics.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2018
Subject
GRB 030329, optical photometry
Date
2003-03-30T08:13:11Z (22 years ago)
From
Peter Garnavich at U of Notre Dame <pgarnavi@miranda.phys.nd.edu>
P. Garnavich (Notre Dame), K.Z. Stanek and P. Berlind (CfA)
Photometry of the GRB 030329 afterglow (Peterson & Price: GCN
1985; Torii: GCN 1986) has been obtained with the Fred
L. Whipple 1.2m telescope beginning March 30.10 (UT). The
R-band images show a power-law decay index of -1.9 between
14 and 18 hours after the burst. This is significantly steeper
than the decay index of -0.9 derived from the photometry
of Rykoff & Smith (GCN 1995) and Burenin et al. (GCN 2001)
obtained within 8 hours of the burst. A break in the light curve
appears to have occurred between 0.3 and 0.5 days after
the burst.
The post-break light curve is well fit by
R=16.3+1.9*2.5*log(age in days)
with the calibration based on that of Martini et al. (GCN 2013).
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2019
Subject
GRB030329: ROTSE network observes steepening of decay curve
Date
2003-03-30T08:29:16Z (22 years ago)
From
Don Smith at U michigan <dasmith@rotse2.physics.lsa.umich.edu>
D. A. Smith reports on behalf of the ROTSE collaboration:
The ROTSE-IIIb instrument at McDonald Observatory in Texas began observing the
optical counterpart to GRB 030329 as soon as it was possible to do so. The
first calibrated image began at 30 March 02:27:31 (UTC). Images were
calibrated against the R-band magnitudes of the USNO A2.0 catalog, and the
source was initially found to be at an unfiltered magnitude of 15.35+-0.06 and
fading. Analysis of the first 70 images showed clearly that the rate of decay
had increased when compared to the observations recorded by ROTSE-IIIa the
night before (Rykoff & Smith, GCN Circ. 1995). Separate power-law fits to each
instrument's data set indicated that the flux decay slope had shifted from
about 1.0 (consistent with the decay slope reported by Price, et al. GCN
Circ. 2017) to about 1.9 (consistent with the decay reported by Garnavich et
al. GCN Circ. 2018). A plot of these decay curves along with the power-law
fits can be seen at http://www.rotse.net/transients/grb030329/). An
extrapolation of these curves predicts a break time of about 12.1 h after the
burst.
ROTSE-IIIb will continue to observe GRB 030329 as long as it is able to do so.
GCN Circular 2020
Subject
Redshift of GRB 030329
Date
2003-03-30T09:39:08Z (22 years ago)
From
Jochen Greiner at MPI <jcg@mpe.mpg.de>
J. Greiner (MPE Garching), M. Peimbert (UNAM Mexico), C. Esteban (IAC Spain),
A. Kaufer, P. Vreeswijk, A. Jaunsen, J. Smoke (all ESO), S. Klose
(Thueringer Landessternwarte) and O. Reimer (Univ. Bochum) report
for a larger collaboration:
The optical afterglow (Peterson & Price, GCN 1985; Torii, GCN 1986) of
the bright HETE (H2652) GRB 030329 was observed with the high-resolution
UVES spectrograph at the VLT unit Kueyen, starting around March 30.166 UT.
Quick-look analysis reveals several absorption and emission lines.
In particular, we find emission lines at 5680, 5850, and 7669 A
which we identify with Hbeta, [OIII]5007 and Halpha. Absorption lines
are clearly seen at 3270 A and 3334 A which we identify as the MgI 2853 and
MgII 2800 doubletts. Based on these identifications we determine a redshift
of z=0.1685. This is nearest GRB so far (except GRB 980425/SN1998bw),
consistent with the exceptional brightness of this afterglow at all
wavelengths.
We are highly indebted to the ESO staff at Paranal for their assistence,
and K. Torii (RIKEN) for providing an early finding chart.
[GCN OPS NOTE(11jan13): Per author's request, "Estaban" was changed
to "Esteban".]
GCN Circular 2021
Subject
GRB 030329: Optical Decay
Date
2003-03-30T11:16:08Z (22 years ago)
From
Jules Halpern at Columbia U. <jules@astro.columbia.edu>