GRB 050730
GCN Circular 3810
Subject
GRB 050730: Third Epoch WSRT Radio Observations
Date
2005-08-15T12:10:52Z (20 years ago)
From
Alexander van der Horst at U of Amsterdam <avdhorst@science.uva.nl>
A.J. van der Horst (University of Amsterdam) and E. Rol (University of
Leicester) report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
"We reobserved the position of the GRB 050730 afterglow at 4.9 GHz with
the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope at Aug 13 10.57 UT to 21.88 UT,
i.e. 12.61 - 13.08 days after the burst (GCN 3704).
We do not detect a radio source at the position of the source in GCN 3761.
At the position of the source we measure a formal flux of 22 +/- 38
microJy."
GCN Circular 3781
Subject
GRB 050730: WSRT Radio Observations
Date
2005-08-08T12:24:03Z (20 years ago)
From
Alexander van der Horst at U of Amsterdam <avdhorst@science.uva.nl>
A.J. van der Horst (University of Amsterdam) and E. Rol (University of
Leicester) report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
"We observed the position of the GRB 050730 afterglow at 4.9 GHz with the
Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope at Aug 5 11.10 UT to 22.40 UT, i.e.
4.63 - 5.10 days after the burst (GCN 3704), and at Aug 7 10.96 to 16.00
UT, i.e. 6.63 - 6.84 days after the burst.
At the position of the radio source (GCN 3761), we measure a formal flux
of 61 +/- 30 microJy on Aug 5 and 72 +/- 43 microJy on Aug 7. However, the
North-South smearing at this declination is such that it is hard to assess
the reality of this 2-sigma detection. A combined map of these two
observations gives a formal flux measurement of 54 +/- 26 microJy."
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 3778
Subject
GRB 050730, optical observation
Date
2005-08-06T19:15:13Z (20 years ago)
From
Peter Garnavich at U of Notre Dame <pgarnavi@nd.edu>
S. Kannappan (U. Texas), P. Garnavich (Notre Dame),
K.Z. Stanek (Ohio State), D. Christlein (Yale), and
D. Zaritsky (U. Arizona)
We imaged the position of the GRB 050730 afterglow (Holland et al.
GCN 3704) with the Magellan Observatory Baade Telescope and IMACS
imaging spectrograph on 2005 Aug. 3 23:40 (UT) which is 99.7 hours
after the burst. Three, 300 sec exposures were obtained in the
R band and combined into a deep image. The afterglow (+possible host
galaxy) is detected and the brightness is estimated to be
R=23.4+/-0.1 mag based on the calibration by Holman et al. (GCN 3727).
The power-law decay index between the IMACS R-band observation obtained
3 hours after the burst and 100 hours is -1.5 which confirms the light
curve break suggested by Holman et al. (GCN 3727