GRB 030329
GCN Circular 2612
Subject
GRB 030329: Rebrightening of hyperluminal ejecta.
Date
2004-06-18T06:09:43Z (21 years ago)
From
Arnon Dar at Technion-Israel Inst. of Tech <arnon@physics.technion.ac.il>
S. Dado [Technion], A. Dar [Technion] and A. De Rujula [CERN] report:
Taylor, Frail, Berger and Kulkarni [1] reported the discovery of a second
compact radio source in the afterglow of GRB 030329 at an angular distance
of 0.28 +\- 0.05 mas from the main source on day 51.3 after burst, which
was not resolved in their VLBI observations at other epochs. This
separation is "hyperluminal": the relative mean sky-projected-velocity is
> 19c. A transient strong rebrightening of the second radio source is
consistent with the reported "jitter" first seen in observations of the
optical afterglow that began on day 51.75 (GCN 2224 [2], GCN 2259 [3]).
At that late time, the optical afterglow of GRB 030329/SN 2003dh is
expected to be dominated by the supernova. The spectroscopic resolution of
the afterglow into the individual contributions of the SN and GRB [2]
indicates that the GRB contribution rebrightened by a factor 2 or more.
An analogous rebrightening of the second radio source may explain why
it was resolved only on day 51.3.
The discovery [1] of a hyperluminal compact source may pin down the origin
of GRBs [5]. We encourage prompt and follow-up VLBI observations of XRFs.
In the cannonball model the source separation observed by Taylor et al. is
the expected one [5], and both GRBs and XRFs are produced by hyperluminal
plasmoids ejected in SN explosions. Relative to GRBs, XRFs are selectively
viewed at closer distances, and at viewing angles typically 3 times larger
[6]. This makes them very attractive targets for radio searches of the
expected hyperluminal motions, in particular promptly after the burst.
[1] astro-ph/0405300: G.B. Taylor, D.A. Frail, E. Berger, S. Kulkarni
[2] GCN 2224: K.Z. Stanek, D.W. Latham, M.E. Everett
[3] GCN 2259: K.Z. Stanek, D. Bersier, M. Calkins, D.L. Freedman, T. Spahr
[4] astro-ph/0307435: T. Matheson et al.
[5] astro-ph/0406325: Dado, A. Dar, A. De Rujula
[6] astro-ph/0309294: S. Dado, A. Dar, A. De Rujula
GCN Circular 2517
Subject
SN 2003dh/GRB030329 late-time optical spectroscopy
Date
2004-01-15T22:10:26Z (22 years ago)
From
Ryan Chornock at UC Berkeley <chornock@astro.berkeley.edu>
A. V. Filippenko, R. Chornock, and R. J. Foley, University of California,
Berkeley, report that CCD spectra (range 310-940 nm) of SN 2003dh, associated
with GRB 030329 (GCN 1985; GCN 2107), were obtained on Dec. 21 UT with the
Keck I 10-m telescope (+LRIS). Skies were clear, the seeing was about 1",
and the exposure time was 2.5 hours (five dithered half-hour integrations).
The object continues to exhibit broad [O I] 630 nm emission typical of Type
Ib/Ic supernovae in the nebular phase (e.g., Foley et al. 2003, PASP, 115,
1220). There is also evidence for weak, significantly narrower [Ca II] 730 nm
emission. There may be some weak, broad features in other parts of the
spectrum, but subtraction of a template spectrum of the host galaxy (which
dominates the continuum at this time) will be necessary to confirm these.
GCN Circular 2455
Subject
GRB 030329: Planned XMM-Newton Observation
Date
2003-11-27T16:24:18Z (22 years ago)
From
Norbert Schartel at XMM-Newton/ESA <nscharte@xmm.vilspa.esa.es>
The XMM-Newton SOC has scheduled a Target of Opportunity
observation of the field of GRB 030329 in revolution 734
(12th to 13th of December 2003). Details of the instrumental
setup can be found at (Observation ID 0128531601):
http://xmm.vilspa.esa.es/external/xmm_sched/sched_obs_srch_frame.shtml
GCN Circular 2424
Subject
GRB030329: radio observations at RT-22 (CrAO)
Date
2003-10-20T16:06:19Z (22 years ago)
From
Vasilij Rumjantsev at CrAO <rum@crao.crimea.ua>
A.Volvach, I.Strepka (CrAO) on behalf of CrAO/IKI/SAO collaboration report:
We have observed the radio afterglow position (E.Berger et al, GCN2014) of
GRB030329 (R. Vanderspek et al, GCN1997) in June 26 at 4.8GHz, in July 8 at
22GHz, and in September at 4.8 and 8GHz with 22-m radio telescope RT-22 of
Crimean Astrophysical Observatory. The radio source was detected at 22 GHz
and upper limits have been obtained for other frequencies. The flux
densities are:
Date,UT Frequency Duration Flux density
GHz hrs mJy
Jun. 26 4.8 2 21.0 (3 sigma upper limit)
Jul. 08 22 2 6.9 +-2.3
Sep. 23 8 2 9.0 (3 sigma)
Sep. 25 4.8 3 7.5 (3 sigma)
The sensitivity at 4.8 GHz was significantly improved in September with
introducing in operation a cryo-radiometer. In September we detected a
signal at 4.8 GHz, however the beam of RT-22 (12 arcmin) covers 3 sources
found in NVSS (Condon et al. 1998, AJ, 115, 1693).The upper limit of flux
density on Sep. 25 includes statistical errors and uncertainty of spectral
indices of the 3 sources.
The message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2305
Subject
GRB030329: Subaru Optical Spectroscopy
Date
2003-07-18T00:01:53Z (22 years ago)
From
George Kosugi at Subaru Telescope <george@subaru.naoj.org>
G. Kosugi, Y. Mizumoto, Y. Ohyama, K. S. Kawabata, and K. Aoki
(Subaru Telescope, NAOJ), report:
Spectra of GRB 030329 (H2656, Vanderspek et al, GCN 1997) optical
transient (Peterson & Price, GCN 1985) were obtained using the
Subaru 8.2m telescope and FOCAS (Faint Object Camera And Spectrograph)
with the wavelength coverage of 4700 to 9400A (R=700) on June 22.3 UT
(85 days after the burst).
Compared with the previous data (May 8 and 9 UT : 40 days after the
burst, Kawabata et al. IAUC 8133), we found that several nebular
phase lines ([OI] 6300/6364, [CaII] 7291/7323, etc.) began to emerge
out of the photospheric phase supernova spectrum.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2299
Subject
GRB030329: RTT150 optical observations
Date
2003-07-15T10:24:50Z (22 years ago)
From
Irek Khamitov at TUG <irekk@tug.tug.tubitak.gov.tr>
I. Khamitov (TUG), I. Bikmaev, A.Galeev, N. Sakhibullin, V. Suleymanov (KSU);
Z. Aslan, O.Golbasi(TUG), S.Ozer (AU); M.A. Alpar (SU); U. Kiziloglu, A. Baykal(METU);
R. Burenin, R. Sunyaev, M. Pavlinsky, D. Denissenko, O.Terekhov, A. Tkachenko (IKI)
Report:
We observed the GRB 030329 target with 1.5-m Russian-Turkish
Telescope RTT150 at Bakyrlytepe, Turkey, in June-July, 2003, by
using Andor CCD. Based on the photometry by Henden (GCN 2082) we
measured the following Rc magnitudes for the target:
Date t-t0 Rc dR
2003-06-02 65.322 21.65 0.07
2003-06-03 66.303 21.67 0.06
2003-06-23 86.314 21.80 0.10
2003-06-29 92.338 21.83 0.10
2003-07-02 95.334 21.83 0.17
2003-07-03 96.309 21.91: 0.28
Although there is some indication of a systematic fading, the
errors are large for obvious reasons and we are already near the
limiting magnitude at this high zenith distance. We will therefore
discontinue the observations for this summer season.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2288
Subject
GRB030329, optical observation in May
Date
2003-06-27T22:29:44Z (22 years ago)
From
Alexei Pozanenko at IKI, Moscow <apozanen@iki.rssi.ru>
M.A. Ibrahimov, I.M. Asfandiyarov, B.B. Kahharov (UBAI), A.Pozanenko (IKI),
V.Rumyantsev (CrAO), G.Beskin (SAO), I.Zolotukhin, A.Birykov (SAI MSU)
report:
We have observed the OT GRB030329 found by B.Peterson and P.Price (GCN 1985)
with 1.5m telescope of Maidanak High-altitude Observatory (UBAI). Several
VBR Bessel images were obtained in May and June 2003. Based on the field
photometry by A. Henden (GCN 2082) we estimate the OT magnitudes:
--------------------------------------------
Date2003 Mid UT exp fltr mag err
--------------------------------------------
May 07 17:00 1800 R 20.72 0.09
May 07 17:58 3000 B 22.77 0.30
May 07 18:33 1800 V 22.20 0.31
May 13 17:07 1200 R 20.93 0.43
May 15 16:46 3300 R 21.16 0.21
May 17 16:33 2100 R 21.76 0.20
May 17 17:19 2400 B 21.86 0.27
May 19 16:32 1800 R 21.53 0.19
May 19 17:29 3600 B 22.59 0.16
May 21 17:33 600 R 20.91 0.18
May 22 17:00 2700 R 21.15 0.09
Jun 01 16:55 2400 R 21.77 0.19
Using our previous observations (GCN 2219) we can determine that within the
error bars the OT brightness did not change in B filter over the period from
May 3 till 19. Our data in R filter taken on May 7 and June 1 are
consistent with the values reported by S.Zharikov et al. (GCN 2245, 2265).
The data on May 19 are consistent with measurement by K.Stanek et al. (GCN
2244) taken 13 hrs later.
Based on our "R" data set obtained with the same instrument we can conclude
that the OT re-brightness took place in May 21-22. However there are
apparent differences in brightness estimations in the nearest epochs of the
observations obtained by the other teams in May 21-22.
The magnitude on May 21 differs from that estimated 12 hours earlier (GCN
2244). The magnitude on May 22 differs from that estimated 3.5 hours later
(R. Burenin et al., GCN 2260). Taking into account published brightness
estimations one may suppose that during the period of May 21-22 the OT
experienced brightness variations as suggested by K.Stanek et al. (GCN 2244,
2259). However, the indicated differences are marginal (3.7 sigma), and to
confirm the variations cross-calibration of the data obtained by different
teams on May 21-22 is necessary. If brightness variation will be confirmed,
such kind of variations should be considered as the shortest ones observed
to date for the late afterglows.
The Maidanak data for May 21, 22 can be accessed at
http://grb.rssi.ru/GRB030329/, and the file names are:
030329_030521R_UB.fits and 030329_030522R_UB.fits
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2285
Subject
GRB030329: second XMM-Newton observation
Date
2003-06-19T12:38:20Z (22 years ago)
From
Sandro Mereghetti at IASF/CNR <sandro@mi.iasf.cnr.it>
A.Tiengo (IASF-Milano), S.Mereghetti (IASF-Milano) and N.Schartel
(XMM-Newton SOC, Villafranca) report:
A 24 hour long observation of GRB030329 has been obtained with XMM-Newton
starting at 21 UT on May 28, 2003. After rejecting high background time
intervals, the net exposure time in the EPIC instrument is about 40 ks.
The X-ray afterglow is detected at a level of (7+/-3)x10^-15 erg cm^-2
s^-1 (observed flux in the 2-10 keV range). This value is consistent with
the late time (t>1 day) flux evolution as a power law with index ~1.9, as
reported by Tiengo et al. (astro-ph/0305564).
The X-ray spectrum is well fit by a power law with photon index 2.2+/-0.4
and absorption <9x10^20 cm^-2.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2282
Subject
GRB030329 -- RATAN-600 data in April-May
Date
2003-06-11T17:33:39Z (22 years ago)
From
Sergei Trushkin at SAO RAS/Russia <satr@sao.ru>
Trushkin S.A. (SAO RAS) on behalf of the SAO-IKI collaboration report:
We have observed GRB 030329 during four sets with RATAN-600 radio telescope,
the mean flux densities of the radio counterpart are given in the table:
Frequency 3-7 Apr 13-21 Apr 1-7 May 15-31 May
-------------------------------------------------
GHz mJy +- mJy +- mJy +- mJy +-
-------------------------------------------------
3.9 49 10 15 3 15 3 10 3
7.7 33 5 28 5 15 3 18 3
11.2 20 5 47 7 32 6 19 4
The spectral index varied from -0.7 to +1.1, +0.7, +0.75
respectively with rms ~0.15.
The May indices are consistent with Nobeyama data (Cir.N2089).
GCN Circular 2276
Subject
GRB030329, SPM optical observations (Correction of GCN2075 R band)
Date
2003-06-07T04:06:02Z (22 years ago)
From
Sergej Zharikov at OAN IA UNAM <zhar@astrosen.unam.mx>
S. Zharikov (IA OAN UNAM) reports:
The right magnitude of GRB030329 OT
in R band of 31 March, 2003 at
UT 7:49 was 16.48(3).
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2268
Subject
GRB030329, further radio observations at GMRT
Date
2003-06-04T10:00:26Z (22 years ago)
From
D. Bhattacharya at Raman Research Inst. <dipankar@rri.res.in>
A. Pramesh Rao and C. H. Ishwara Chandra (NCRA, Pune),
D. Bhattacharya (RRI, Bangalore) and A.J. Castro-Tirado (IAA, Granada)
report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
The afterglow of GRB030329 (Peterson & Price, GCN 1985) was observed
with the GMRT for about 5 hours on May 31, 2003. The observations were at
1288 MHz with a bandwidth of 12MHz and effective angular resolution of
~3.5". The flux density of the source seen at the position of the GRB on
31 March and 01 April 2003 (Rao et al, GCN 2073) has increased to 1.1 mJy
confirming that the radio source is related to the GRB.
The details of the GMRT measurements of GRB030329 at 1288 MHz:
Date Time Flux Density
31 May 2003 14-18 UT 1100+/-150 microJy
31 March/01 April 2003 14-22 UT 330+/-100 microJy
The quoted error bars are 2-sigma, and include systematic errors of
calibration.
Note that the flux density at 31 March/01 April epoch has been
revised upwards in comparison to that reported in GCN 2073,
following a better absolute flux density calibration.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2265
Subject
GRB030329, SPM optical observations
Date
2003-06-02T10:04:32Z (22 years ago)
From
Sergej Zharikov at OAN IA UNAM <zhar@astrosen.unam.mx>
S. Zharikov, G. Tovmassian (OAN SPM IA UNAM, Ensenada, Mexico)
report:
We have observed the OT GRB030329 found by B.Peterson and P.Price (GCN
1985) using 1.5m telescope of OAN-SPM Observatory, BC, Mexico.
A set of exposures in VR Bessel filters was obtained of 2 June under
photometric and good seeing conditions.
Based on field photometry by A. Henden (GCN 2082)
we estimate OT (or its host galaxy?) magnitudes:
2 June
<Tobs> Texp. Filter Mag.
UT 6:00 2400sec V 21.86(10)
UT 5:15 3000sec R 21.42(7)
The R magnitude no changed during 20 May up to 2 June.
(see Burenin et al., GCN 2260).
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2260
Subject
GRB 030329: optical observations
Date
2003-05-31T09:07:43Z (22 years ago)
From
Rodion Burenin at IKI, Moscow <rodion@hea.iki.rssi.ru>
R. Burenin, R. Sunyaev, M. Pavlinsky, D. Denissenko, O. Terekhov,
A. Tkachenko (IKI); Z. Aslan, O.Golbasi, I. Khamitov (TUG); M.A. Alpar
(SU); U. Kiziloglu, A. Baykal (METU); I. Bikmaev, N. Sakhibullin, V.
Suleymanov (KSU)
report:
We observed the GRB 030329 afterglow with 1.5-m Russian-Turkish
Telescope RTT150 at Bakyrlytepe, Turkey. Our data for May 20 -- 28 are
consistent with constant flux of the OT. Using the photometry by Henden
(GCN 2082) we measured the following R magnitudes for the OT:
Date UT R err
05-20 21:45 21.65 0.28
05-21 21:20 21.41 0.06
05-22 20:30 21.60 0.08
05-24 21:15 21.40 0.10
05-28 21:10 21.55 0.06
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2259
Subject
GRB 030329/SN 2003dh: Jitter Episode
Date
2003-05-29T20:36:24Z (22 years ago)
From
Krzysztof Z. Stanek at CfA <kstanek@cfa.harvard.edu>
K. Z. Stanek, D. Bersier, M. Calkins, D. L. Freedman and T. Spahr
(Harvard-Smithsonian CfA) report:
We continued imaging of the SN 2003dh (Matheson et al. GCN 2107, 2120;
Garnavich et al. IAUC 8108, 8114; Stanek et al. astro-ph/0304173)
associated with the GRB 030329 with the FLWO 1.2-m telescope between
May 26 UT 05:00 and May 29 UT 05:00 (57.7 and 60.7 days after the
burst) using standard R_c filter. The increase in brightness by >0.3
mag observed by Stanek et al. (GCN 2244) between May 21 and May 23 UT
was followed by a decay of ~0.3 mag and then by an increased scatter
in the light curve:
UT R dR Filter Texp
----------------------------------------------------
2003-05-26 05:00 21.612 0.06 R 5x900 sec
2003-05-28 04:50 21.456 0.07 R 4x900 sec
2003-05-29 05:00 21.617 0.09 R 4x900 sec
The figure showing the light curve since May 20 UT can be accessed at:
http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~kstanek/jitter.jpg
We should stress that we have a very extensive data set for this
object obtained with exactly the same instrumentation and this "jitter
episode" is very unusual when compared to the whole data set and we
strongly believe that it is real and it might continue. Therefore,
observations using larger telescopes, also in other bands, are
strongly encouraged.
Any use of these data should include proper reference to this GCN.
GCN Circular 2255
Subject
GRB 030329: Correction to GCN 2254
Date
2003-05-28T20:26:22Z (22 years ago)
From
Haw Cheng at UNC <hawcheng@physics.unc.edu>
We have noticed a minor numerical error near the end of GCN 2254. Here
is a corrected (and slightly expanded) version:
H. Cheng, M. Bayliss, D. Reichart, J. Moran, M. Nysewander, M. Schwartz,
and P. Holvorcem report on behalf of the UNC GRB team of the FUN GRB
collaboration:
We observed the afterglow (Peterson & Price, GCN 1985) of GRB 030329
(Vanderspek et al., GCN 1997) with the 32-inch Tenagra II telescope in
IcRcVIc on April 2nd and 3rd, in IcIc on April 4th and 5th, and in Ic on
April 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, and 10th. Between April 2nd and 10th, we find
that the afterglow faded from Ic = 16.9 mag to Ic = 18.9 mag. Our error
bars are typically less than 0.02 mag (1 sigma).
Fitting a four-parameter model to the data, where the parameters are the
temporal index alpha, the spectral index beta, a normalization parameter,
and a parameter that measures the level of systematic (i.e.,
non-statistical) fluctuations in the light curve, we find that alpha =
-1.70(+0.13)(-0.14), beta = -1.38(+0.20)(-0.20), and that the fading
afterglow is fluctuating at the 17.5(+3.8)(-3.5)% level at these times.
Furthermore, these fluctuations appear to be chromatic in nature.
We note that the measured spectral index is too steep given the measured
temporal index and the post-jet break time relations of Sari, Piran, &
Halpern (1999, ApJ, 519, L17). Possible explanations include:
1. The light curve had not yet reached its asymptotic temporal index, which
if the afterglow is unextinguished would be alpha = -2.76 +- 0.40 if the
cooling break is redward of the observed bands or alpha = -3.76 +- 0.40 if
the cooling break is blueward of the observed bands; or
2. The light curve is extinguished. Although this does not appear to be
the case at earlier times, this could be the case at later times if dust
was destroyed within the initial opening angle of the jet, but then the jet
expanded laterally behind undisturbed dust.
GCN Circular 2254
Subject
GRB 030329: Optical Observations
Date
2003-05-28T18:42:55Z (22 years ago)
From
Haw Cheng at UNC <hawcheng@physics.unc.edu>
H. Cheng, M. Bayliss, D. Reichart, J. Moran, M. Nysewander, M. Schwartz,
and P. Holvorcem report on behalf of the UNC GRB team of the FUN GRB
collaboration:
We observed the afterglow (Peterson & Price, GCN 1985) of GRB 030329
(Vanderspek et al., GCN 1997) with the 32-inch Tenagra II telescope in
IcRcVIc on April 2nd and 3rd, in IcIc on April 4th and 5th, and in Ic on
April 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, and 10th. Between April 2nd and 10th, we find
that the afterglow faded from Ic = 16.9 mag to Ic = 18.9 mag. Our 1-sigma
error bars are typically less than 0.02 mag.
Fitting a four-parameter model to the data, where the parameters are the
temporal index alpha, the spectral index beta, a normalization parameter,
and a parameter that measures the level of of systematic (i.e.,
non-statistical) fluctuations in the light curve, we find that alpha =
-1.70(+0.13)(-0.14), beta = -1.38(+0.20)(-0.20), and that the fading
afterglow is fluctuating at the 17.5(+3.8)(-3.5)% level at these times.
We note that the measured spectral index is too steep given the measured
temporal index and the post-jet break time relations of Sari, Piran, &
Halpern (1999, ApJ, 519, L17). Possible explanations include:
1. The light curve had not yet reached its asymptotic temporal index, which
if the afterglow is unextinguished would be alpha = -2.76 +- 0.20 if the
cooling break is redward of the observed bands or alpha = -3.76 +- 0.20 if
the cooling break is blueward of the observed bands; or
2. The light curve is extinguished. Although this does not appear to be
the case at earlier times, this could be the case at later times if dust
was destroyed within the initial opening angle of the jet, but then the jet
expanded laterally behind undisturbed dust.
GCN Circular 2249
Subject
GRB 030329: Planned XMM-Newton Observation
Date
2003-05-27T11:42:09Z (22 years ago)
From
Norbert Schartel at XMM-Newton/ESA <nscharte@xmm.vilspa.esa.es>
The XMM-Newton SOC has scheduled a Target of Opportunity
observation of GRB 030329 in revolution 635 (28th to
30th of May 2003). Details of the instrumental setup
can be found at (Observation ID 0128531501):
http://xmm.vilspa.esa.es/external/xmm_sched/sched_obs_srch_frame.shtml
GCN Circular 2247
Subject
GRB 030329: optical photometry at various french observatories
Date
2003-05-26T12:02:10Z (22 years ago)
From
Michel Boer at CESR-CNRS <Michel.Boer@cesr.fr>
A. Klotz and M. Boer (CESR France) report magnitudes of GRB 030329 obtained
at TAROT-Calern, at TBL-Pic du Midi and by members of AUDE (Association des
Utilisateurs de Detecteurs Electroniques - Electronic Device Users
Association). All images are photometrically calibrated by Alain Klotz using
the reference stars given by A. Henden (GCNC 2023).
Red filtered measurements :
DATE Observers Diam(mm) filter int(s) R +/- observatory day-GRB
2003-04-12T20:21:10 SD 600 R 5400 19.30 0.18 Lantelme 14.3628
2003-04-21T00:20:37 EB&al. 600 R 3000 20.25 0.75 Pic Du Midi 22.5291
2003-04-21T22:32:00 OM&YM&PM 820 R 600 19.9 0.4 Belesta 23.4537
2003-05-04T21:32:41 CC&SD 600 R 2760 22.74 0.37 Lantelme 36.4124
Infrared filtered measurements (afteglow not detected) :
DATE Authors Diam(mm) filter int(s) mag +/- observatory day-GRB
2003-04-17T23:30:00 AK&CB 2000 K 3060 >18.2 Pic du Midi 19.4939
2003-04-18T01:26:00 AK&CB 2000 J 3960 >18.6 Pic du Midi 19.5745
Unfiltered measurements converted to the R band :
DATE Authors Diam(mm) filter int(s) R +/- observatory day-GRB
2003-04-01T00:25:00 AK 200 C 360 16.72 0.45 Guitalens 2.5321
2003-04-04T20:30:00 TAROT 250 C 600 18.55 0.36 Calern 6.3689
2003-04-06T21:48:21 ML 318 C 2550 18.58 0.33 Dax 8.4234
2003-04-07T22:05:00 TM&BC 600 C 400 18.68 0.23 Pic du Midi 9.4349
2003-04-08T20:30:00 TAROT 250 C 600 18.81 0.44 Calern 10.3690
2003-04-21T22:05:00 OM&YM&PM 820 C 900 19.93 0.15 Belesta 23.4315
Observers
AK = Alain Klotz
ML = Mathieu Lahitte
TM&BC = Thierry Midavaine & Bernard Christophe
SD = Serge Deconhiout
AK&CB = Alain Klotz & Coralie Berteloite
OM&YM&PM = Olivier Maury, Yves Megret, Patrick Martinez
EB&al. = Eric Barbotin, Cathy Dupeyre, Alain Laffont, Audrey Cazenave
CC&SD = Cyril Cavadore & Serge Deconhiout
Complementary data (images) :
http://www.cesr.fr/~klotz/grb030329/results.html
This report may be cited.
GCN Circular 2246
Subject
GRB 030329: optical photometry at Belesta observatory (France)
Date
2003-05-26T11:46:00Z (22 years ago)
From
Michel Boer at CESR-CNRS <Michel.Boer@cesr.fr>
A. Klotz, M. Boer (CESR France) and P. Martinez (ADAGIO observatory)
report magnitudes obtained by a team of the ADAGIO observatory at Belesta,
France (IAU station A05) using a 82 cm telescope and a Sbig ST8 Kaf1602E
CCD camera with a red filter.
All images are photometrically calibrated by Alain Klotz using the reference
stars given by A. Henden (GCNC 2023).
Red filtered measurements :
DATE Observ. Diam(mm) filter expo(s) Rmag +/- observatory day-GRB
2003-04-23T22:28:00 OM&YM&PM 820 R 1440 20.11 0.07 Belesta 25.4475
2003-04-26T21:50:00 PMB&OM&PM 820 R 600 20.35 0.29 Belesta 28.4245
2003-04-30T21:15:00 YM&PM 820 R 1560 20.30 0.17 Belesta 32.4002
2003-05-03T21:24:00 PMB&OM&PM 820 R 2460 20.87 0.12 Belesta 35.4065
Observers :
OM&YM&PM = Olivier Maury, Yves Megret, Patrick Martinez
PMB&OM&PM = Pierre-Michel Berg=E9, Olivier Maury, Patrick Martinez
YM&PM = Yves Megret, Patrick Martinez
Complementary data (images) :
http://www.cesr.fr/~klotz/grb030329/results.html
This report may be cited.
GCN Circular 2245
Subject
GRB030329, Optical observations
Date
2003-05-26T07:13:08Z (22 years ago)
From
Sergej Zharikov at OAN IA UNAM <zhar@astrosen.unam.mx>
S. Zharikov(OAN IA UNAM), V. Chavushyan, R. Mujica (INAOE) report:
We have observed the OT GRB030329 found by B.Peterson and P.Price (GCN
1985) using the 2.1m telescope of the "Guillermo Haro" Observatory in
Cananea, Sonora, Mexico with the Landessternwarte Faint Object
Spectrograph and Camera (LFOSC).
The I image was obtained on April 26 with time of exposure 1200s.
Several R band images with time of exposure 1800s were obtained on April
28,30 and May 2,5,6 and 8 under good photometric conditions. Based on
filed photometry by A. Henden (GCN 2082) we estimate of OT magnitudes:
Date Time(UT) Band Magnitude
----------------------------------------------
April 26 03:21 I 20.02(10)
April 28 03:20 R 20.49(7)
April 30 03:24 R 20.60(8)
May 2 03:28 R 20.64(8)
May 5 03:55 R 20.90(12)
May 6 03:09 R 20.90(12)
May 8 03:43 R 20.88(11)
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2244
Subject
GRB 030329/SN 2003dh: Possible increase in brightness
Date
2003-05-25T03:35:52Z (22 years ago)
From
Krzysztof Z. Stanek at CfA <kstanek@cfa.harvard.edu>
K. Z. Stanek, D. W. Latham (Harvard-Smithsonian CfA) and M. E. Everett
(Planetary Sciences Institute) report:
We imaged the SN 2003dh (Matheson et al. GCN 2107, 2120; Garnavich et
al. IAUC 8108, 8114; Stanek et al. astro-ph/0304173) associated with
the GRB 030329 with the FLWO 1.2-m telescope between May 20 UT 05:45
and May 23 UT 04:30 (51.75 and 54.7 days after the burst) using
standard R filter. The transient seems to brighten during that time:
UT R dR Filter Texp
----------------------------------------------------
2003-05-20 05:45 21.575 0.07 R 4x900 sec
2003-05-21 05:00 21.689 0.11 R 4x900 sec
2003-05-22 05:45 21.429 0.08 R 4x900 sec
2003-05-23 04:30 21.321 0.09 R 5x900 sec
Observations using larger telescopes, also in other bands, are
strongly encouraged.
Any use of these data should include proper reference to this GCN.
GCN Circular 2243
Subject
GRB 030329: HST ACS Observations of the Host
Date
2003-05-23T18:34:25Z (22 years ago)
From
Andrew S. Fruchter at STScI <fruchter@stsci.edu>
A. Fruchter (STScI), A. Levan (U. Leicester/STScI), R. Hook
(ST-ECF/STScI), N. Pirzkal (ST-ECF), J. Gorosabel (STScI/IAA-CSIC),
P. Garnavich (Notre Dame), P. Nugent (LBNL), S. Thorsett (UCSB),
A. Castro-Tirado (IAA), J.M. Castro Ceron (STScI), C. Kouveliotou
(USRA), S.T. Holland (Notre Dame), J. Hjorth (U. Copenhagen), and
N. Tanvir (U. Hertfordshire) report for the GOSH collaboration:
GRB 030329 has been observed at three epochs by HST: 15/16 April,
21/23 April and 12/13 May. During all epochs UV (ACS/HRC), optical
(ACS/WFC) and NIR (NICMOS) images were obtained. Additionally, in
the first epoch an ACS grism spectrum was taken, and in the second
epoch a STIS optical spectrum, delayed from the first epoch by a
gyrocope failure, was also obtained. Here we report on aspects of
the imaging and grism spectroscopy which provide a unique contribution
from HST: information on the nature of the host.
All the ACS images show the host extending to approximately ~0."5
from the OT to the west, with a PA of approximately 230 degrees.
In the most recent ACS/WFC images the OT has faded sufficiently to
allow a reasonable subtraction of the OT from the host, particularly
in the F435W and F606W filters where the blue color of the host
provides greater contrast against the redder OT than in the F814W
image. We find the magnitude of the host to be approximately
V=22.7 +/- 0.3, where the uncertainty is dominated by the subtraction
of the OT and the unknown contribution to the host magnitude by
faint outerlying areas. This apparent magnitude corresponds to an
absolute magnitude of about -16.5, very similar to that of the SMC.
The host can also be seen clearly in the UV ACS/HRC F250W images
taken on May 12. The OT appears to lie at the end of a bar-like
structure approximately 0."25 across, which at the ~600 Mpc
angular-diameter distance of the GRB corresponds to a length of
about 800 pc.
The separation of the host from the OT can also be discerned in
the grism spectrum, where the emission lines of the host are seen
to be offset from spectral continuum of the OT. Although the
spatial projection of the grism makes this somewhat uncertain, the
Halpha emission of the host appears to be fairly well centered on
host's blue light.
Images of the OT and host and the 2-d grism spectrum can be seen
at
http://www.stsci.edu/~fruchter/GRB/030329
[GCN OPS NOTE (23may03): The extra zero in the URL was removed.]
GCN Circular 2242
Subject
GRB 030329 Optical Observations
Date
2003-05-22T14:45:48Z (22 years ago)
From
Javier Gorosabel at LAEFF-INTA, Madrid <jgu@laeff.esa.es>
J. Gorosabel (IAA-CSIC/STScI), A. de Ugarte Postigo (IAA-CSIC),
A.J. Castro-Tirado (IAA-CSIC), A. Fruchter (STScI),
A. Levan (U. Leicester/STScI), S. Guziy (IAA-CSIC),
J.M. Castro Cer��n (STScI), A. Guijarro (CAHA),
A. Aguirre (CAHA), report:
"We have imaged the field of the GRB 030329 (GCN 1997) in four optical
colours with the 2.2 m (+BUSCA) telescope at the Observatorio de Calar
Alto on 20.9148-20.9670 UT May 2003. Aperture photometry of the
counterpart yielded Ic = 20.92 +/- 0.07. The zero point is based on the
star located at R.A.(J2000) = 10:44:42, Dec(J2000) = +21:32:31.6 with
I = 15.432 (GCN 2082). Further observations are planned."
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2241
Subject
GRB030329: XMM-Newton observation
Date
2003-05-22T14:29:47Z (22 years ago)
From
Sandro Mereghetti at IASF/CNR <sandro@mi.iasf.cnr.it>
A.Tiengo (IASF-Milano), S.Mereghetti (IASF-Milano), and N.Schartel
(XMM-Newton SOC, Villafranca) report:
An XMM-Newton TOO observation of GRB030329 (Ricker et al. IAU Circ. 8101)
has been performed on May 5, 2003 from 12:30 to 24 UT.
A source positionally consistent with the optical transient of GRB030329
(Price and Peterson, GCN 1987) has been detected with the EPIC MOS and PN
cameras. Its spectrum can be fit by a power law with photon index
2.0+/-0.25 and absorption smaller than 6x10^20 cm^-2.
The 2-10 keV observed flux is (2.1+/-0.6)x10^-14 erg cm^-2 s^-1.
Comparison with previous X-ray observations obtained with RXTE (Marshall
and Swank, GCN 1996; Marshall et al., GCN 2052) indicates that the X-ray
flux decay is consistent with a power law F ~ t^(-1.7).
GCN Circular 2228
Subject
HETE GRB030329, correction to Rc Observations in Loiano
Date
2003-05-13T18:01:31Z (22 years ago)
From
Graziella Pizzichini at IASF/CNR,Bologna <pizzichini@bo.iasf.cnr.it>
G. Pizzichini and P. Ferrero (IASF/CNR, Bologna), C. Bartolini,
A. Guarnieri, A. Piccioni (Bologna University), A. Righini (Firenze
University) and I. Bruni (Bologna Astronomical Observatory) report:
The Rc magnitude quoted by us for the OT of GRB030329 in GCN 2136
was not correct, due to a bad subtraction of the background
in conditions of nearly full moon.
By coadding the three exposures listed below:
--
UT start exptime filter
-----------------------------
Apr. 13.8783 300s Rc
Apr. 13.8824 300s Rc
Apr. 13.8865 300s Rc
and using the star at RA = 161.231899, DEC = 21.522793,
in the new field photometry given by Henden, GCN 2082,
we now find Rc = 19.53 +- 0.20 .
In the following night, by coadding the exposures:
-
UT start exptime filter
-----------------------------
Apr. 14.8879 300s Rc
Apr. 14.8923 300s Rc
Apr. 14.8973 300s Rc
and still under very unfavorable conditions because of the moon,
we find Rc = 20.27 +- 0.33. Errors quoted are 1 sigma.
We thank Dr. A. Henden for promptly signalling the problem to us and
Dr. E. Palazzi for useful advice.
GCN Circular 2225
Subject
GRB 030329: Optical limit (contemporaneous imaging)
Date
2003-05-12T03:55:03Z (22 years ago)
From
Ken ichi Torii at RIKEN <torii@crab.riken.go.jp>
Y. Okamoto (NIFTY-Serve Space Forum), K. Ohnishi (Nagano National
College of Technology), and K. Torii (RIKEN) report:
The sky area of the GRB 030329 (Vanderspek, et al., GCN 1997) was
contemporaneously imaged with the Yatsugatake Camera between 2003
March 29 10:00 UT (97 minutes before burst) and 14:00 UT. The
Yatsugatake Camera is an ultra wide field (85 x 70 deg) video camera
(focal length 3.5mm, f/1.4 lens equipped with Sony XC-75) placed at an
altitude of 1000m in Yatsugatake, Japan. Images are output in NTSC
format after 8-s (on-chip) integrations, stored to frame memory (MSJ
SS-10), and recorded to timelapse video tape. The camera has built-in
infrared-cut filter while no additional filter is used.
By now, we have digitized and inspected the data between 10 minutes
before and after the burst and created running mean images of four
consecutive frames. In these images, a neighboring V=5.1 star (41 LMi)
is clearly detected while no transient stellar object brighter than 41
LMi is seen at the position of the optical afterglow (Peterson and
Price, GCN 1985; Torii, GCN 1986). We therefore derive preliminary
upper limit of 5.1 mag for an optical transient associated with this
GRB on continuous 32-s time bins between 2003 March 29 11:27 UT and
11:47 UT. Further analysis is in progress.
GCN Circular 2220
Subject
GRB030329: RTT150 optical observations
Date
2003-05-09T14:50:05Z (22 years ago)
From
Irek Khamitov at TUG <irekk@tug.tug.tubitak.gov.tr>
I.Bikmaev (KSU), I. Khamitov (TUG);
N. Sakhibullin, V. Suleymanov (KSU);
R. Burenin, R. Sunyaev, D. Denissenko, M. Pavlinsky, O. Terekhov, A.
Tkachenko, M.Gilfanov (IKI);
Z. Aslan, O.Golbasi (TUG);
U. Kiziloglu, A. Alpar, A. Baykal (METU);
�
report:
�
We continue observations of the GRB 030329 optical afterglow (Peterson
and Price, GCN 1985) with the 1.5-m Russian-Turkish Telescope RTT150
at TUG.� During the nights of May 3,4,7, 2003,� series of� 5 and 15 min
exposures with V-filter have been obtained under good photometric
conditions and average seeing of 1.3 arcsec.� ANDOR TE 2048 x 2048 CCD has
been used as the detector.
�
Results of OT�our photometry (based on Henden's list, GCN 2082 ), averaged
over for each�night,�are�as follow:
�
� Midtime� Vmag�� Verr Total Exp. sec
�
� 03.86UT� 21.40� 0.07 10200
� 04.86UT� 21.33� 0.07 11400
� 07.86UT� 21.60� 0.08��9300
�
Additional note:
Probably, a moved object was found in the vicinity of the OT. This object
was labeled as "O2" in Zharikov et al. (GCN 2171) and as "A" in� Blake and
Bloom (GCN 2011).
�
We integrated all the three night� observations into�one image and�
estimated the magnitudes of the sources� in the afterglow vicinity as
��������������
V����� Verr
�
O1 (B) 23.0�� 0.2
O2 (A) 22.6�� 0.1
�
Using the coordinates of the reference stars�� from Henden's list� we have
determined the positions of OT� and O1, O2 as
�
RA(2000.0) DEC(2000.0)
�
OT 10:44:49.958 21:31:17.50
O1 10:44:50.039 21:31:10.86
O2 10:44:49.373 21:31:15.02
�
The comparision of coordinates with those given by Blake and Bloom has
shown that position of the source "A" is different by 6 arcsec while� the�
the�position of the source "B" is in agreement �within� 0.5 arcsec
positional error of Blake and Bloom.
�
We estimate the color of O2 as� V-R = 0.2,� and of O1 as V-R = 0.9
(R mag estimates are taken from Khamitov et al., GCN 2198)
�
Taking into account the�apparent magnitudes, color and considerable
positional shift, we suppose that this is�an object nearer to the Sun.
Additional observations are encouraged.�
�
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 2219
Subject
GRB030329, BVRI photometry
Date
2003-05-08T17:05:46Z (22 years ago)
From
Alexei Pozanenko at IKI, Moscow <apozanen@iki.rssi.ru>
M.A. Ibrahimov, I.M. Asfandiyarov, B.B. Kahharov (UBAI), A.Pozanenko (IKI),
V.Rumyantsev (CrAO), G.Beskin (SAO) on behalf of large collaboration
report:
We have observed the OT GRB030329 found by B.Peterson and P.Price (GCN 1985)
with 1.5m telescope of Mt.Maidanak High-altitude Observatory (UBAI).
Several BVRI Bessel images were obtained on May 3, and 5 under good
photometric and seeing conditions (1-1.5 arcsec). Based on filed
photometry by A. Henden (GCN 2082) we estimate the OT magnitudes:
Mid time exposure filter mag err
UT, May. sec
03.700 2400 B 22.14 0.13
03.726 1800 V 21.29 0.10
03.670 1800 R 20.87 0.09
03.750 1800 I 20.08 0.12
05.690 3000 B 22.08 0.11
05.722 1800 V 21.33 0.08
05.655 1800 R 20.74 0.10
05.746 1800 I 20.28 0.15
Multicolor observations will be continued.
GCN Circular 2217
Subject
GRB 030329: Optical limit (contemporaneous photography)
Date
2003-05-08T08:06:15Z (22 years ago)
From
Ken ichi Torii at RIKEN <torii@crab.riken.go.jp>
K. Sasaki (Japan Fireball Network), M. Tomita (Japan Fireball
Network), K. Ohnishi (Nagano National College of Technology),
and K. Torii (RIKEN) report:
The sky area of GRB 030329 (Vanderspek, et al., GCN 1997) was
contemporaneously photographed on 2003 March 29 by K. Sasaki and
M. Tomita with all-sky patrol cameras.
In the frames tabulated below, no significant object is found at the
position of the optical afterglow (Peterson and Price, GCN 1985;
Torii, GCN 1986). We derive preliminary upper limits for the optical
transient by comparison with either 41 LMi (V=5.1) or 54 Leo (V=4.3)
which is significantly detected.
Data from KS
-----------------------------
Start(UT) End(UT) Mag.
-----------------------------
10:40:00 10:59:58 >5.1
11:00:00 11:19:58 >5.1
11:20:00 11:39:58 >5.1
11:40:00 11:59:58 >5.1
-----------------------------
Data from MT
-----------------------------
Start(UT) End(UT) Mag.
-----------------------------
10:30:00 10:59:00 >4.3
11:00:00 11:29:00 >4.3
11:30:00 11:59:00 >4.3
12:00:00 12:29:00 >4.3
12:30:00 12:59:00 >4.3
-----------------------------
Effective exposure for each frame,
399 s for KS and 580 s for MT, is 1/3 of the elapsed time
due to a rotating shutter in front of the optics.
Details of the instruments, originally designed for detecting
fireballs (bright meteors), are as follows.
Position of the observatory: KS
Iwate, Japan
141d08m24s E, +39d28m22s N, 100m altitude
Position of the observatory: MT
Ishikawa, Japan
136d48m01s E, +36d55m39s N, 10m altitude
The following instruments are common to the two observatories.
Camera: Canon T70 with command back
Optics: Canon New FD 15mm f/2.8 full-frame fish-eye lens, used at f/2.8
Filter: No
Film: Kodak TMAX 400
Rotating shutter: Open fraction is 1/3
---------------------------------------------
GCN Circular 2212
Subject
GRB 030329: High-Resolution Spectroscopy of the Host
Date
2003-05-07T08:27:34Z (22 years ago)
From
Josh Bloom at Harvard/CFA <jbloom@cfa.harvard.edu>
GRB 030329: High-Resolution Spectroscopy of the Host
J. S. Bloom (CfA/Harvard), N. Morrell (Las Campanas Observatory),
S. Mohanty (CfA) report:
"Beginning May 7.01 UT, we observed the position of the optical
transient (Peterson & Price, GCN 1985) of GRB 030329 (Vanderspek et
al., GCN #1997) using the Magellan Inamori Kyocera Echelle (MIKE)
Camera on the Baade 6.5 m at the Las Campanas Observatory. The
dispersion at 7600 Angstrom (Ang) is 0.053 Ang/pixel. The narrow
emission lines (Martini et al., GCN #2013; Della Ceca et al., GCN
#2015; Greiner et al. #2020; Caldwell et al., GCN #2053