GRB 070125
GCN Circular 6186
Subject
GRB 070125: Chandra X-ray Confirmation of Jet Break
Date
2007-03-09T21:18:41Z (19 years ago)
From
S. Bradley Cenko at Caltech <cenko@srl.caltech.edu>
S. B. Cenko, A. M. Soderberg (Caltech), D. A. Frail (NRAO), and D. B. Fox
(Penn State) report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
The Chandra X-ray Observatory + ACIS observed the field of GRB070125
(Hurley et al, GCN 6024) beginning 5 March 2007 21:28 UT for a 30 ks
exposure (mean epoch ~ 39.76 days after the burst). No source is detected
at the location of the optical afterglow (Cenko & Fox, GCN 6028).
Formally, using a circular aperture with 1" diameter, we detect 0.9 +/-
5.0 photons from 0.3-10 keV. Using spectral properties derived from early
XRT observations (Gamma=2.0, nH=8e20; Racusin and Vetere, GCN 6030),
we estimate an upper limit on the afterglow flux of < 2e-15 erg cm^-2
s^-1.
Had the X-ray flux seen by the Swift XRT (Burrows & Racusin, GCN 6181)
continued to decay as a single power-law with index ~ -1.5, we would
expect a flux ~ 5e-15 erg cm^-2 s^-1 at the Chandra epoch (~ 20 Chandra
ACIS-S photons), more than a factor of 2 above this upper limit. We
therefore conclude the X-ray decay has steepened since the last XRT
detection, confirming the jet break seen in the optical light curve
(Mirabal, Halpern, & Thorstensen, GCN 6096; Garnavich et al., GCN 6165).
A plot of the X-ray light curve can be found at:
http://www.srl.caltech.edu/~cenko/public/grb070125_xray.jpg
We would like to thank the entire Chandra X-ray Center staff for their
execution of this observation and the rapid processing of the data.
GCN Circular 6181
Subject
GRB 070125: X-ray light curve analysis
Date
2007-03-08T21:34:34Z (19 years ago)
From
David Burrows at PSU/Swift <dnburrows@gmail.com>
D. N. Burrows and J. Racusin report on behalf of the Swift XRT team:
Garnavich et al. (GCN Circ. 6165) have suggested that the X-ray light
curve of GRB 070125 has a late break to a steep slope, in agreement
with the optical break reported by Mirabel, Halpern & Thorstensen
(GCN 6096) and confirmed by their observations.
We have re-examined the XRT light curve, which extends from ~44 ks to
~1.5 Ms post-burst, and reconfirm our original conclusions. Full
details, including a plot of the X-ray light curve showing several
possible fits of single and broken power laws, are given in GCN
Report 28.3 (http://gcn.gsfc.nasa.gov/reports/report_28_3.pdf). We find:
1) the X-ray light curve is best fit by a broken power law, but with
a break time at 1.35 +/- 0.35 days (90% confidence), not > 4 days as
required by the optical data (Mirabel, Halpern & Thorstensen, GCN
6096