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GRB 051028

GCN Circular 4171

Subject
GRB051028:MASTER optical observations
Date
2005-10-28T18:21:57Z (20 years ago)
From
Vladimir Lipunov at Moscow State U/Krylov Obs <robot@astro.inetcomm.ru>
V. Lipunov, V.Kornilov, D.Kuvshinov, N.Tyurina, A.Belinski, E.Gorbovskoy,
A.Krylov, G.Borisov, A.Sankovich, V.Vladimirov

Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Moscow Union 'Optic'
MASTER  robotic system (http://observ.pereplet.ru) responded to
HETE GRB051028.6 .
An automated response took  first image 2005-10-28 16:59:56 UT,
03h 23 m  after the GRB time.
The unfiltered image is calibrateds relative to USNO A2.0 (0.8 R + 0.2 B).
 Reduction is continued.
The robot not find OT-candidate in error box brighter then  17.0.

This work is supported by RFFI  04-02-16411 grant.
This message can be cited.
Mailto: lipunov@sai.msu.ru

GCN Circular 4172

Subject
GRB 051028 (=H3951): A GRB localized by HETE
Date
2005-10-28T19:28:06Z (20 years ago)
From
Roland Vanderspek at MIT <roland@space.mit.edu>
GRB 051028 (=H3951):  A GRB localized by HETE

K. Hurley, G. Ricker, J-L. Atteia, N. Kawai, D. Lamb, and S. Woosley, 
on behalf of the HETE Science Team; 

M. Arimoto, T. Donaghy, E. Fenimore, M. Galassi, C. Graziani, 
N. Ishikawa, A. Kobayashi, J. Kotoku, M. Maetou, M. Matsuoka, 
Y. Nakagawa, T. Sakamoto, R. Sato, T. Shimokawabe, Y. Shirasaki, 
S. Sugita, M. Suzuki, T. Tamagawa, K. Tanaka, and A. Yoshida, on behalf 
of the HETE WXM Team; 

N. Butler, G. Crew, J. Doty, G. Prigozhin, R. Vanderspek, 
J. Villasenor, J. G. Jernigan, A. Levine, G. Azzibrouck, J. Braga, 
R. Manchanda, and G. Pizzichini, on behalf of the HETE Operations and 
HETE Optical-SXC Teams; 

M. Boer, J-F Olive, and J-P Dezalay, on behalf of the HETE FREGATE 
Team; 

report:

At 13:36:01.47 UTC (48961.47 s UT) on 28 Oct 2005, the HETE FREGATE and
WXM instruments detected event H3951, a bright GRB.

The burst triggered FREGATE in the 30-400 keV energy band.  The burst
duration (T90) was 16 seconds in both the 30-400 keV band and the 
7-30 keV band.

Ground analysis of the WXM data produces a 90% confidence error region 
measuring 33 x 18 arcminutes with corners at the following coordinates:
  
    RA = 01h 50m 19.6s, Dec = +47d 41m 06s
    RA = 01h 47m 01.1s, Dec = +47d 38m 02s
    RA = 01h 46m 58.3s, Dec = +47d 55m 55s
    RA = 01h 50m 17.5s, Dec = +47d 58m 58s

The 30-400 keV fluence of GRB 051028 is 6e-6 erg/cm2; the 2-30 keV
fluences is 6e-7 erg/cm2.  The hardness ratio allows us to classify
this burst as a classical GRB.

Further information will be available at
  
  http://space.mit.edu/HETE/Bursts/GRB051028

GCN Circular 4173

Subject
GRB051028:MASTER observations
Date
2005-10-28T21:29:54Z (20 years ago)
From
Vladimir Lipunov at Moscow State U/Krylov Obs <gcncirc@observ.inetcomm.ru>
V. Lipunov, V.Kornilov, D.Kuvshinov, N.Tyurina, A.Belinski, E.Gorbovskoy,
A.Krylov, G.Borisov, A.Sankovich, G. Antipov, V.Vladimirov

Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Moscow Union 'Optic'
MASTER  robotic system (http://observ.pereplet.ru) responded to
HETE GRB051028.6 (GCN 4172).
An automated response took  first image 2005-10-28 16:59:56 UT,
03h 23 m  after the GRB time (GCN4171).
The unfiltered image is calibrated relative to USNO A2.0 (0.8 R + 0.2 B).
We  not find OT-candidate in error box brighter then  17.9 on the 
summ of  9 images between 17 32 40 - 18 03 03 UT.
Mean time is 17 48 09 ( 4 h 12 min after GRB Time).

The JPG-image of the summ   will be  available at
http://observ.pereplet.ru/images/GRB050828/1.jpg  (In error circ you can 
see candidates which we recognised with 2MASS ).
The reduction is continuing.
This work is supported by RFFI  04-02-16411 grant.
This message can be cited.
Mailto: lipunov@sai.msu.ru

GCN Circular 4174

Subject
GRB051028: Swift XRT Position
Date
2005-10-29T05:11:11Z (20 years ago)
From
Judith Racusin at PSU <racusin@astro.psu.edu>
J. Racusin (PSU), K. Page (U. Leicester), J. Kennea, D. Morris, C. Pagani, 
D. Burrows (PSU), N. Gehrels (GSFC) on behalf of the Swift XRT team:

The Swift XRT began observing the field of the HETE discovered GRB 051028 
(Hurley et al., GCN 4172) at 20:44:08 UT, approximately 7.1 hours after 
the trigger. We have analyzed the first 3 orbits of data and we detect an 
uncatalogued fading X-ray source at the following coordinates:

RA(J2000):   01 48 15.1
Dec(J2000): +47 45 12.5

with an estimated uncertainty of 6 arcseconds (90% containment), including 
corrections for the XRT boresight offset.  This position is 5.2 arcminutes 
from the center of the HETE error box reported in Hurley et al. (GCN 
4172).

Note that the HETE error box quoted in Hurley et al. (GCN4172) actually 
extends beyond the field of view of the XRT.  However, the source 
mentioned above is the only bright source in the field and is decaying. 
Therefore, it is likely the afterglow of GRB051028.

GCN Circular 4175

Subject
GRB051028: WHT optical candidate
Date
2005-10-29T05:34:42Z (20 years ago)
From
Martin Jelinek at Inst.Astrophys.Andalucia,Granada <mates@iaa.es>
M. Jelinek, S.B.Pandey, S.S.Guziy, A.J.Castro-Tirado, J.
Gorosabel, A. de Ugarte Postigo, and S.  Vitek (IAA CSIC
Granada, Spain) and
J.T.A. De Jong, (Max Planck Intitut fuer Astronomie,
Heidelberg, Germany)


report


We have observed the complete errorbox of HETE trigger 3951
(Hurley et al, GCN 4172) with the prime focus camera of
William Herschel Telescope at La Palma starting 21:42UT (ie.
~7h after the GRB).

We detect an object within the XRT errorbox (Racusin et al,
GCN 4174) at coordinates RA 01:48:15.01 Dec 47:45:09.2 (+/-
1.0", J2000), with a rough magnitude R=22, which is not
present in DSS. Further observations will be needed to confirm
whether this is indeed the optical afrterglow of GRB051028.
The image limit is ~24.2.

This message may be cited.

GCN Circular 4176

Subject
GRB051028: confirmation of the afterglow
Date
2005-10-29T07:06:49Z (20 years ago)
From
Martin Jelinek at Inst.Astrophys.Andalucia,Granada <mates@iaa.es>
S.B.Pandey, M. Jelinek, S.S.Guziy, A.J.Castro-Tirado, J.
Gorosabel, A. de Ugarte Postigo, and S.  Vitek (IAA CSIC
Granada, Spain) and
J.T.A. De Jong, (Max Planck Intitut fuer Astronomie,
Heidelberg, Germany)


report:


Further monitoring of the afterglow candidate (Jelinek et al.
7145) using 4.2 meter William Herschel Telescope confirms the
decay nature of the source, suggesting the source is really the
optical afterglow of GRB 051028.

Our observation 15 h after the burst show that the OT magnitude 
has decayed considerably and it is around 23 in R band.

We have posted the searchmap to the following website:
http://lascaux.asu.cas.cz/mates/grb051028.gif

This message may be cited.

GCN Circular 4177

Subject
GRB051028: Swift/UVOT upper limits
Date
2005-10-29T15:16:45Z (20 years ago)
From
Alexander Blustin at MSSL-UCL <ajb@mssl.ucl.ac.uk>
A. J. Blustin, M. J. Page, M. De Pasquale, S. R. Oates (UCL-MSSL),
K. Hurley (Berkeley), M. Chester (PSU), N. Gehrels (GSFC) report
on behalf of the Swift/UVOT team:

The Swift/UVOT began observing the field of GRB 051028 at
20:44:06 UT on 2005-10-28, 7.1 hours after the HETE trigger (Hurley
et al. GCN 4172). No new source (with respect to the DSS) was
detected at the XRT (Racusin et al. GCN 4174) or WHT (Jelinek et al.
GCN 4175, Pandey et al. GCN 4176) positions in summed images from
the four UVOT filters used down to the following 3-sigma upper
limits:

Filter  T_range(hours)  Exp(sec)  3sigUL
V       7.4-10.3        1441      20.2
W1      8.7-10.8        1700      21.1
M2      8.5-10.5        1763      21.4
W2      7.1-9.1         1456      21.4

We note that this burst is at low galactic latitude, with an
E(B-V) of 0.21 and A_v of 0.71 mag.

GCN Circular 4178

Subject
GRB051028: optical observations
Date
2005-10-29T17:37:08Z (20 years ago)
From
Patrizia Ferrero at TLS Tautenburg <ferrero@tls-tautenburg.de>
P. Ferrero, D. A. Kann, S. Klose, and C. Hoegner, Thueringer
Landessternwarte Tautenburg,

report:


We observed the entire error box of GRB 051028 (HETE trigger 3951;
Hurley et al. 2005, GCN 4172) with the 1.34-m Tautenburg Schmidt
telescope equipped with the prime focus CCD camera on October 28,
2005. Sky conditions were very good.

We obtained 6x180s I-band images (mean time Oct. 28.716 UT), 6x180s
R-band  images (mean time Oct. 28.739 UT), 6x180s V-band images (mean
time Oct.  28.77 UT) and a final set of 60x180s I-band images (mean
time Oct. 28.898 UT), corresponding to 3.58, 4.12, 4.88 and 7.94
hours after the burst, respectively.

In our stacked images we clearly detect the afterglow candidate
(Jelinek et al. 2005, GCN 4175; Pandey et al. 2005, GCN 4176) in all
bands.

A preliminary estimation of the afterglow magnitude on the first six
co-added I-band images gives I~19, in comparison with the USNOB.1
star 1377-0047752 at R.A. (J2000)=01h 48m 15.974s and Decl.=+47d 45' 02.34"
(Monet et al. 2003).

Further analysis is in progress.


This message may be quoted.

GCN Circular 4179

Subject
GRB051028 SARA Observation
Date
2005-10-30T05:18:17Z (20 years ago)
From
Autumn Homewood at Clemson U <ahomewo@clemson.edu>
Autumn Homewood, Kiran Garimella, Stephen Fuller and Dieter H. Hartmann,
report on behalf of the Clemson GRB Follow-Up Team, and the FUN
Collaboration:

We imaged the central 8x12 arcmin field of the HETE error box for trigger
3951 (GCN 4172) with the SARA 0.9-m at Kitt Peak. We do not detect the OT
reported by Jelinek, et al (GCN 4175). We began observations under cloudy
conditions at UT 2005 Oct 29 02:27:55, approximately 11 hours after the
burst, and stacked 18 R-band exposures of 180 seconds each. We derive a
limiting magnitude of R=20.4 +/-0.3 mag. Images were calibrated using the
USNO B1.0 Catalog. This message may be cited.

The Clemson GRB Follow-Up Website can be found at:
http://people.clemson.edu/~kgarime/burst

The SARA website is located at:
http://www.saraobservatory.org

GCN Circular 4182

Subject
GRB051028:MASTER correction and final results
Date
2005-10-30T15:53:30Z (20 years ago)
From
Vladimir Lipunov at Moscow State U/Krylov Obs <gcncirc@observ.inetcomm.ru>
V. Lipunov, V.Kornilov, D.Kuvshinov, N.Tyurina, A.Belinski, E.Gorbovskoy,
A.Krylov, G.Borisov, A.Sankovich, G. Antipov, V.Vladimirov

Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Moscow Union 'Optic'
MASTER  robotic system (http://observ.pereplet.ru) responded to
HETE GRB051028 (GCN 4172) at very nice Moscow weather.
Unfortunately, the remoute observations was delayted due to manage computer 
problems. Now we find new earlier images. First image was at 2005-10-28 
16:23:14 (not at 16:59:56 UT as we noted in GCN4171, GCN4173) i.e. 2h 46min 
after GRB time.

The unfiltered image is calibrated relative to USNO A2.0 (0.8 R + 0.2 B).
Final results: the uper limits on OT (M. Jelinek et al. GCN4175) are

UT (start)    T-T_GRB  TotExpTime  3sigma limit

16:23:14     02h 46 m     45 s        17.9
16:59:56     03h 23 m     45 s        17.5
17:32:40     04h 12 m    360 s        18.3
20:01:04     06h 41 m   1050 s        19.6
21:46:43     08h 26 m   1200 s        19.4


This work is supported by RFFI  04-02-16411 grant.
This message can be cited.
Mailto: lipunov@sai.msu.ru

GCN Circular 4183

Subject
Konus-Wind observation of GRB 051028
Date
2005-10-31T11:17:25Z (20 years ago)
From
Valentin Pal'shin at Ioffe Inst <val@mail.ioffe.ru>
S. Golenetskii, R.Aptekar, E. Mazets, V. Pal'shin, D. Frederiks, and
T. Cline on behalf of the Konus-Wind team report:

The GRB 051028 (HETE trigger #3951; Hurley et al., GCN 4172) 
triggered Konus-Wind at T0=48967.159 s UT (13:36:07.159)

The time-integrated spectrum of the GRB (from T0 to T0+8.448 sec)
is well fitted (in the 20 keV - 2 MeV range)
by a power law with exponential cutoff model:
dN/dE ~ E^(-alpha) * exp(-E/E0)
with alpha = 0.73 (-0.26, +0.22)
and E0 = 236 (-68, +110) keV (chi^2 = 61/62 dof).
The peak energy Ep = 298 (-50, +73) keV.
It can also be fitted by GRBM (Band) model for which:
the low-energy photon index is alpha = -0.47 (-0.37, +0.57),
the high energy photon index beta < -1.97,
the break energy E0 = 150 (-69, +118) keV.


As observed by Konus-Wind the burst had a duration ~12 sec,
fluence 6.78(-1.08, +0.61)x10^-6 erg/cm2 and
peak flux on 256-ms time scale 1.29(-0.24, +0.15)x10^-6 erg/cm2/sec
(both in the 20 keV - 2 MeV energy range).

All the quoted errors are at the 90% confidence level.

GCN Circular 4205

Subject
GRB051028: Swift-XRT refined analysis
Date
2005-11-07T12:03:55Z (20 years ago)
From
Kim Page at U.of Leicester <kpa@star.le.ac.uk>
K.L. Page, M.R. Goad (U. Leicester), D.N. Burrows, J. Racusin (PSU), S.
Oates (MSSL), M. Ajello (MPE) and M. Trippico (GSFC-SSAI) report on behalf
of the Swift XRT team:

We have analysed 38 ks of XRT observations of the HETE burst GRB051028
(trigger number H3951; GCN 4172, Hurley et al.), between approximately 7.1
and 178 hours after the trigger. As reported in GCN 4174 (Racusin et al.),
there is an uncatalogued, fading X-ray source within the HETE error
circle. The refined coordinates for this X-ray afterglow are:

RA(J2000):   01 48 15.1
Dec(J2000): +47 45 12.9

with an estimated uncertainty of 3.8 arcsec (90% containment) and
including the latest XRT boresight correction. The position is 0.6 arcsec
from that given by Racusin et al. (GCN 4174) and 3.9 arcsec from the
optical afterglow detected by the WHT (GCNs 4175, Jelinek et al., and
4176, Pandey et al.)

The X-ray light-curve shows a simple power-law decay with a slope of 1.25
+0.25/-0.16.  The spectrum of the full 38 ks of data can also be modelled
with a power-law, with photon index, Gamma = 1.74 +/- 0.21. There is no
evidence for an absorbing column higher than the Galactic value of 1.2e21
cm^-2.

At 7.1 hours, the 0.3-10 keV observed (unabsorbed) flux was ~1.8e-12
(2.2e-12) erg cm^-2 s^-1. At 178 hours, the afterglow had faded to an
observed (unabsorbed) flux level of 2.3e-14 (2.8e-14) erg cm^-2 s^-1.

GCN Circular 4278

Subject
GRB 051028 Optical Observations
Date
2005-11-16T15:03:15Z (20 years ago)
From
T.P. Prabhu at Indian Astro. Obs. <tpp@crest.ernet.in>
D.K. Sahu, S. Srividya and S. Vanniarajan (Indian Institute of
Astrophysics, Bangalore,India) communicate on behalf of a larger Indian
collaboration:

We observed the central 10x10 arcmin region of the error circle of
the HETE trigger 3951 in Bessell R and I filters with the 2-m
Himalayan Chandra Telescope, Hanle, India, starting from 16:15 UT,
2005 October 28 (about 2.7 hours after the burst).

We could clearly detect the OT of GRB 051028 reported by Jelinek et al.
(GCN 4175). The preliminary R band magnitude for the OT, estimated
using the calibration provided by Henden (GCN 4184), is R=20.77+/-0.10
at 16:18 UT. The OT decayed by ~1.3 mag in R band in 1.5 hours. Further
analysis is in progress.

This message may be cited.

GCN Circular 5190

Subject
GRB 051028 : WIDGET pre-trigger limit
Date
2006-05-31T11:41:11Z (19 years ago)
From
Toru Tamagawa at RIKEN <tamagawa@riken.jp>
K. Masuno, Y. Urata, M. Tashiro, K. Abe, K. Onda, N. Kodaka (Saitama-U),
F. Usui (ISAS/JAXA), M. Kuwahara (TUS/RIKEN), T. Tamagawa (RIKEN) report: 

"We observed the error region of GRB 051028 (Hurley et al. GCN 4172)
with the very wide-field camera WIDGET located at Akeno, Japan. WIDGET
monitored the region with repeat of unfiltered 5-second exposures
between 16.0 min and 11.2 min before the burst. We did not find any
optical emission from the afterglow position (Jelinek et al. GCN
4175). The 1-sigma limiting magnitude of each frame derived by the
Tycho-2 catalog was around V=10.3 magnitudes." 

This message may be cited.

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