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). We note that the
strong Lyman absorption (GCN 3709,3710,3716) falls at the peak of the
standard R-band transmission making comparison between magnitude
estimates made with different detector/filter combinations difficult.
GCN Circular 3775
Subject
GRB050730, optical observations
Date
2005-08-06T11:16:35Z (20 years ago)
From
T.P. Prabhu at Indian Astro. Obs. <tpp@crest.ernet.in>
B.C.Bhatt and D.K. Sahu communicate on behalf of a larger GRB
collaboration group:
GRB050730 was observed with the 2-m Himalayan Chandra Telescope of Indian
Astronomical Observatory, Hanle, on 2005 July 31, 16:10 UT (300s+900s).
The magnitude of the OT with repect to USNO B1.0 0862-0270612,
0862-0270590, and 0862-0264205 (GCN 3741) was R=21.39+/-0.08.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 3761
Subject
GRB050730: Radio Detection
Date
2005-08-04T17:42:00Z (20 years ago)
From
Patrick B. Cameron at Caltech <pbc@astro.caltech.edu>
P. B. Cameron (Caltech) reports on behalf of the Caltech-NRAO-Carnegie
collaboration:
"We observed the field of GRB050730 (GCN 3704) with the Very Large Array
at 8.5 GHz beginning August 2.03 UT. We detect a radio source consistent
with the optical source (GCN 3705) with position
RA(J2000): 14:08:17.11 +/- 0.01
DEC(J2000): -03:46:17.2 +/- 0.2
and flux density 145 +/- 28 uJy. Further observations are planned.
The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the National
Science Foundation operated under cooperative agreement by Associated
Universities, Inc."
GCN Circular 3746
Subject
GRB050730: FORS1 and UVES/VLT low- and high-resolution spectroscopy
Date
2005-08-03T16:33:49Z (20 years ago)
From
Stefano Covino at Brera Astronomical Observatory <covino@merate.mi.astro.it>
V. D'Elia, A. Melandri, F. Fiore, L. Stella, L. Sbordone (INAF-OAR), G.
Tagliaferri, S. Covino, D. Fugazza, D. Malesani (INAF/OABr), G.
Chincarini (Univ. Milano-Bicocca), M. Della Valle (INAF/Arcetri), L.
Pellizza (CEA, Saclay), R. Scarpa (ESO-Chile) on behalf of the MISTICI
collaboration, report:
Starting on July 31, 2005 00:01:02 UT (about 4 hours after the GRB
trigger) we have obtained low- and high-resolution spectra (FORS1, Grism
300V, R~800; UVES, R~40,000, 7.5 km/s in the observer frame) of the
optical afterglow of GRB050730 (Holland et al., GCN 3704). The
observations consisted of 2 exposures for a total of 1800 second with
FORS1 and 2 exposures for a total of 6000 seconds with UVES covering the
full spectral range 3500-9800 Angstrom.
At the time of the observations the afterglow magnitude was R~17.7 and
the decay of the afterglow, as measured from the FORS1 flux-calibrated
spectra, is consistent with a temporal decay index of about -1. For the
UVES spectra, the resulting continuum signal to noise per resolution
element spans from 10 to 20 in the 6000-9000 Angstrom range.
A preliminary analysis of the data confirms a very rich spectrum and all
features reported by the GRAASP collaboration (GCN 3709 and 3732). We
also detect strong, saturated, SiIV1393,1402, CIV1548,1550, CII1334,
CII*1335, Al1670, AlII1854 absorption lines at z=3.968. The main
absorption systems span a velocity range of up to 100 km/s.
A full analysis is underway.
We thank the ESO staff for the excellent support in performing these
observations in service mode.
This message can be quoted.
GCN Circular 3741
Subject
GRB 050730: OHP optical observations
Date
2005-08-03T08:42:35Z (20 years ago)
From
Jean-Luc Atteia at Lab d Astrophys.,OMP,Toulouse <atteia@ast.obs-mip.fr>
Damerdji, Y. (OHP), Klotz, A. (CESR-OMP),
Boer M. (OHP), Atteia J.L. (LATT-OMP) report:
We imaged the field of GRB 050730
detected by SWIFT (Holland et al. GCNC 3704)
with the 0.8m (F/15) telescope
located at the Observatoire de Haute Provence
Observatory (OHP), France.
Camera is an Andor 47-40 equiped by a R band filter.
We measured the magnitudes of the afterglow
described in Holland et al. (GCNC 3704):
Tmid (julian day) Exp (s) R-Mag
2453582.35721 300 17.14 � 0.10
2453582.36875 300 17.43 � 0.09
2453582.37226 300 17.38 � 0.09
2453582.37577 300 17.31 � 0.06
2453582.37928 300 17.39 � 0.09
2453582.38279 300 17.37 � 0.11
2453582.38630 300 17.45 � 0.13
Magnituded were computed as differential with
the three nearby USNO-B1 stars:
0862-0270612 R=14.96
0862-0270590 R=15.22
0861-0264205 R=15.35
These OHP data seems to show a flattening of the decay
(or a rebrightening) starting after the second exposure.
This message can be cited.
GCN Circular 3732
Subject
GRB 050730: Preliminary Analysis of MIKE Spectrum
Date
2005-08-02T06:00:34Z (20 years ago)
From
Jason Prochaska at UCO/Lick Obs <xavier@ucolick.org>
J. X. Prochaska (UCO/Lick), H.-W. Chen (MIT), J. S. Bloom (UCB),
J. O'Meara (MIT), S. M. Burles (MIT), I. Thompson (OCIW)
report on behalf of the GRAASP collaboration:
"We have performed preliminary analysis of our MIKE spectrum of
the afterglow of GRB 050730. A profile fit to the Lya and Lyb
absorption lines of the sightline through the host galaxy gives
N(HI) = 22.15 +/- 0.05. The simple and narrow metal-line profiles
give a redshift z=3.96855 +/- 0.00005. We estimate a neutral gas
metallicity of S/H ~ 1/100 solar which is lower than the
mean metallicity of damped Lya system at this redshift. More
strikingly,
we identify fine-structure lines of SiII*, OI*, OI**, and FeII*, the
majority of which are saturated. Also, we identify absorption
features near 6150A which we interpret as the NV absorption doublet.
Finally, we identify an intervening damped Lya system at
z=3.5650 +/- 0.0001 with log N(HI)= 20.30 +/- 0.15 and low metallicity
as well as a z=1.773 MgII absorber.
A full analysis is underway.
Figures can be found at this following site:
http://www.graasp.org/Data/index.html
GCN Circular 3727
Subject
GRB 050730, corrected photometry and break?
Date
2005-08-01T20:39:19Z (20 years ago)
From
Peter Garnavich at U of Notre Dame <pgarnavi@nd.edu>
M. Holman (CfA), P. Garnavich (Notre Dame), K.Z. Stanek (Ohio State)
The photometry of the GRB 050730 afterglow and comparison
star reported on GCN 3716 requires correction. The CCD gain
between the standard star and GRB observations differed by 20%.
The IMACS photometry of the afterglow taken on July 30 23:57 (UT)
should be R=17.73 +/-0.05 mag and the comparison star at
14:08:14.62 -03:46:29 (2000) has R=17.41 +/-0.05 mag.
The photometry of Burenin et al. (GCN 3718) based on our old
calibration should be made 0.23 mag fainter. Even
without these corrections, the R-band observations
imply a power-law decay index of -1.7 between 4 hours and
23 hours after the burst. This is much steeper than the V-band
index suggested by Swift UVOT photometry (Blustin et al. GCN 3717).
The Swift V-band data between 12 minutes and 6.5 hours after
the burst is consistent with a power-law decay index of -0.9.
If the spectral index has not changed significantly,
then the combined Swift and ground data suggests a steepening
in the power-law decay occurred between 6 hours and 23 hours
post-burst.
GCN Circular 3722
Subject
GRB 050730: XRT refined analysis
Date
2005-08-01T17:37:06Z (20 years ago)
From
Matteo Perri at ISAC/ASDC <perri@asdc.asi.it>
M. Perri, M. Capalbi, P. Giommi (ASDC), D. Grupe, D.N. Burrows (PSU), L.
Angelini (GSFC-JHU), J. Greiner (MPE) report on behalf of the Swift XRT
team:
We have analysed the first 13 orbits of Swift XRT data for GRB 050730
(Holland et al., GCN 3704). Using Photon Counting (PC) mode
observations, the refined position of the X-ray afterglow is:
RA(J2000) = 14h 08m 17.5s
Dec(J2000) = -03d 46' 19"
with an uncertainty of 6 arcsec. This is 6 arcsec from the UVOT position
(Holland et al., GCN 3704