GRB 060108
GCN Circular 4539
Subject
GRB060108: photometric redshift determination
Date
2006-01-18T01:05:00Z (20 years ago)
From
Cristiano Guidorzi at ARI,Liverpool JMU  <crg@astro.livjm.ac.uk>
A. Melandri (Liverpool), A. Grazian (Rome), C. Guidorzi (Liverpool),
A. Monfardini (Liverpool), C.G. Mundell (Liverpool), A. Gomboc
(Liverpool) report:
"Following the identification of the afterglow of GRB060108 (Butler &
Bloom GCN 4500, Monfardini et al. 4502, D'Avanzo et al. 4501) we have
combined contemporaneous optical and NIR photometry, derived from
BRi' Faulkes North Telescope and UKIRT imaging (Levan et al. GCN 4503),
with the VLT J-band upper limit (D'Avanzo et al. GCN 4501) extrapolated
to the same time period assuming three powerlaw decay index values:
alpha = 0.5, 1.0, 2.0 ( F(t)~t^(-alpha) ).
Adopting a chi-square minimisation of the observed spectral energy
distribution, we have derived upper limits and best fitting redshifts
for the three power law indices. We assumed a power-law energy spectrum:
F(nu)~nu^(-beta).
Conservatively, we derive z<2.7 with z_best = 2.03 and
1.14 < beta < 1.22.
This confirms that GRB060108 is not an ultra-high z burst."
GCN Circular 4503
Subject
GRB 060108: IR observations of afterglow
Date
2006-01-14T00:32:39Z (20 years ago)
From
Andrew Levan at U.of Leicester  <anl@star.le.ac.uk>
A.J. Levan, N.R. Tanvir (U. Hertfordshire), L. Fuhrman (JACH) report
on behalf of a larger collaboration.
Our UKIRT K-band observations of GRB 060108 reported originally
in GCN 4457 also show an object at the location of the revised X-ray
afterglow position suggested by Butler & Bloom (GCN 4500).  The source is
point like and has a magnitude of approximately K=18.4. The implied i-K
colour based on the optical detection at 35 minutes (Monfardini et al. GCN
4502) is i-K ~ 3.
We note that inspection of the SDSS g-band pre-image of the field of GRB
060108 also reveals a marginal detection at the location of this source,
presumably the host galaxy.
Further observations are planned.
GCN Circular 4502
Subject
GRB060108: Faulkes North afterglow evidence
Date
2006-01-13T19:35:23Z (20 years ago)
From
Alessandro Monfardini at JMU/Liverpool Robotic Tele  <am@astro.livjm.ac.uk>
A. Monfardini, C.G. Mundell, C. Guidorzi, I. A. Steele, A. Gomboc,
C.J. Mottram, R.J. Smith, D. Bersier, A. Melandri, S. Kobayashi, 
D. Carter, M.F. Bode (Liverpool JMU), P. O'Brien, E. Rol, N. Bannister
(Leicester) report:
 
"The 2-m Faulkes North Telescope observed GRB060108 (Guidorzi et al, 
GCN4447) starting within minutes from the alert. We report evidence for an
afterglow in i' band at the position:
 
RA: 09:48:01.98   DEC: +31:55:08.6  (~0.5" error)
 
Fully consistent with the revised XRT position suggested in GCN4500 by N. 
Butler and J. S. Bloom. A finding chart is in:
http://www.astro.livjm.ac.uk/~cgm/FTNvsSDSS.pdf
(candidate within the green square)
By comparison with USNOB1 we estimated i' = 21.6 +/- 0.3 at a mean epoch
of about 35minutes from the GRB. 
This message can be cited."
GCN Circular 4501
Subject
GRB 060108: further analysis of VLT images
Date
2006-01-13T19:27:49Z (20 years ago)
From
Daniele Malesani at SISSA-ISAS,Trieste,Italy  <malesani@sissa.it>
P. D'Avanzo (INAF/OABr), D. Malesani (SISSA), G. Tagliaferri, S. Campana 
(INAF/OABr), S. Piranomonte (INAF/OAR), G. Chincarini (Univ. 
Milano-Bicocca), and L. Stella (INAF/OAR), report on behalf of the 
MISTICI collaboration:
After the revision of the coordinates suggested by Butler & Bloom (GCN 
4500) of the X-ray afterglow of GRB 060108 (Oates et al., GCN 4443; 
Page, Oates & Burrows, GCN 4444; Sakamoto et al., GCN 4445), we looked 
again at our VLT near-infrared images (D'Avanzo et al., GCN 4452; 
Piranomonte et al., GCN 4484).
The object reported by Butler & Bloom (GCN 4500) is clearly detected in 
our deep K-band image, taken on Jan 11.28 UT, and is likely extended. 
However, it is not seen in the (shallower) J-band image taken on Jan 
9.31 UT. The implied color is J-Ks > 1.8.
This message can be cited.
GCN Circular 4500
Subject
GRB 060108: Evidence for an XRT Position Offset
Date
2006-01-13T18:08:21Z (20 years ago)
From
Nat Butler at MIT/CSR  <nrbutler@space.mit.edu>