GRB 050712
GCN Circular 3650
Subject
GRB050712: Radio Observations
Date
2005-07-20T17:37:03Z (20 years ago)
From
Patrick B. Cameron at Caltech <pbc@astro.caltech.edu>
P. B. Cameron reports on behalf of the Caltech-NRAO-Carnegie
collaboration:
"We observed the field of GRB050712 (GCN 3573) with the Very Large Array
at 8.5 GHz on July 17.56 and 19.46. No radio source is detected at the
position of the optical transient (GCN 3575) with a 3-sigma upper limit of
96 uJy from the combined images.
The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the National
Science Foundation operated under cooperative agreement by Associated
Universities, Inc."
GCN Circular 3646
Subject
GRB 050712, Tautenburg optical afterglow observations
Date
2005-07-19T16:22:14Z (20 years ago)
From
Andreas Zeh at TLS Tautenburg <zeh@tls-tautenburg.de>
A. Zeh, D. A. Kann, S. Klose (Thueringer Landessternwarte Tautenburg, Germany),
A. Manning, C. Riddle (Clemson University, SC, USA),
report:
We observed the field of GRB 050712 (Grupe et al. 2005, GCN 3573) with
the Tautenburg 1.34m Schmidt telescope in the R filter at two epochs.
The first set of observations consisted of 10 x 30 second exposures,
mid-exposure time UT 050712.937, i.e. 0.353 days after the GRB. The
second set of observations consisted of 20 x 30 second exposures,
mid-exposure time UT 050713.948, i.e. 1.364 days after the burst.
A comparison of our combined first epoch image with our deeper second
epoch image shows that the potential optical counterpart of the afterglow
(Zeh et al. 2005, GCN 3587) has faded away. Thus, we confirm the earlier
report by Rol et al. (2005, GCN 3575) that the source at coordinates RA,
DEC (J2000) = 5:10:48.1, +64:54:47.6 is the optical counterpart of the
X-ray afterglow (Falcone et al. 2005, GCN 3574; Grupe et al. 2005, GCN 3579