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GRB 071010A

GCN Circular 6872

Subject
GRB 071010A: Keck/LRIS Photometry
Date
2007-10-10T21:16:37Z (18 years ago)
From
Josh Bloom at UC Berkeley <jbloom@astron.berkeley.edu>
D. A. Perley, J. S. Bloom, M. Modjaz, and D. Poznanski (UC Berkeley)  
report:

"In addition to the spectroscopic followup reported by Prochaska et  
al. (GCN 6864), we acquired imaging of the GRB 071010A field in g and  
R band with the Keck I 10m telescope (+LRIS) starting in twilight and  
continuing until the object set.  The fading afterglow reported by  
Klotz et al. (GCN 6860) is well-detected.

Photometry, calculated relative to the USNO B1.0 catalog, is as follows:

   t_start(min)         R       err
      67.497      18.025 +/- 0.03
      71.041      18.080 +/- 0.03
     189.225     18.784 +/- 0.02
     194.482     18.806 +/- 0.02
     199.457     18.827 +/- 0.02
     201.544     18.846 +/- 0.02
     203.794     18.873 +/- 0.02

This photometry supersedes the preliminary report in GCN 6861 (Bloom  
et al.). In addition, starting at 213 minutes after the trigger we  
obtained a rapid series of 26 simultaneous g+R integrations of  
typically 30 sec duration, lasting until 239 minutes after the  
trigger.  Analysis is ongoing."

This message may be cited.

GCN Circular 6876

Subject
GRB 071010A: bright NIR afterglow
Date
2007-10-11T01:07:21Z (18 years ago)
From
Daniele Malesani at Niels Bohr Inst,Dark Cosmology Center <malesani@astro.ku.dk>
D. Malesani (DARK), V. D'Elia (INAF/OAR), S. Covino (INAF/OABr), G. 
Andreuzzi, A. Garcia  de Gurtubai (INAF/TNG), and E. Maiorano (INAF/IASF 
Bo), report on behalf of a larger collaboration:

We observed the optical afterglow of GRB 071010A (Moretti et al., GCN 
6859; Klotz et al., GCN 6860) with the TNG telescope located in the 
Canary Islands. Observations were carried out with the NICS instrument 
equipped with the H filter, with mean time Oct 10.82 UT (15.7 hr after 
the GRB).

At the position reported by Bloom et al. (GCN 6861), we clearly detect a 
pointlike object, with H = 16.62 +- 0.05. We note that this value is 
remarkably bright. Assuming typical afterglow colors (Fnu propto nu^-1), 
this corresponds to R ~ 19. When compared to the Keck photometry 
reported by Perley et al. (GCN 6872), this may suggest a flat segment or 
even a flaring behaviour. Alternatively, the afterglow may be very red.

We thus encourage further observations to characterize the afterglow 
light curve and spectrum.

This message can be cited.

GCN Circular 6880

Subject
Optical observations: GRB 071010A
Date
2007-10-11T12:12:29Z (18 years ago)
From
Kuntal Mishra at ARIES,Nainital,India <kuntal@aries.ernet.in>
Rupak Roy, K. Misra, and S. B. Pandey (ARIES, NainiTal, India, on behalf 
of larger Indian GRB collaboration)

We have imaged the field of Swift GRB 071010 (Moretti et al. GCN6859) 
with the 1.04m telescope at NainiTal ~ 0.5 days after the burst. 
Observations were performed in R and I bands in poor sky conditions.

We observed the afterglow candidate in R and I bands reported by Klotz, 
A. et al. (GCN 6860). Magnitude of the OT is R ~ 20 in comparison to 
nearby USNO B1.0 stars.

This message can be cited.

GCN Circular 6885

Subject
GRB 071010A: Continued Keck Imaging
Date
2007-10-11T15:11:26Z (18 years ago)
From
Daniel Kocevski at UC Berkeley <kocevski@berkeley.edu>
D. Kocevski, D. A. Perley, and M. Modjaz (UC Berkeley) report:

Beginning at 04:47:42 UT (2007-10-11) we began a second series of  
imaging on the field of GRB 071010A (GCN 6733) using the Keck I  
telescope (+LRIS).  We acquired 6 images with an effective exposure  
of 270s in R band and 360s in V band.

The optical afterglow (GCN 6860) is still detected and has faded  
since our previous imaging epoch (GCN 6872).  Preliminary aperture  
photometry of the source indicates that it has faded by 0.55  
magnitudes since our previous imaging.  Using the same calibration  
system as in our previous circular, we estimate a preliminary  
magnitude of R=19.42

GCN Circular 6901

Subject
VLA non-detection of GRB 071010A
Date
2007-10-12T14:46:05Z (18 years ago)
From
Poonam Chandra at U Virginia/NRAO <pc8s@virginia.edu>
P. Chandra (UVA/NRAO) and  D. A. Frail (NRAO) report on behalf of the
Caltech-NRAO-Carnegie GRB Collaboration:

"We observed the field centered on the BAT position of the Swift burst
GRB 0701010A (GCN#6859) using the VLA at a frequency of 8.46 GHz
and starting at 0.09 UT on Oct 12, 2007. We do not detect any radio emission
Keck optical position of the afterglow (GCN#6861). The flux density at
afterglow position is  -4 � 35 uJy.

The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the National
Science Foundation operated under cooperative agreement by Associated
Universities, Inc."

GCN Circular 6934

Subject
GRB 071010A: Late-time Keck/LRIS photometry - possible host galaxy and jet break
Date
2007-10-18T21:59:38Z (18 years ago)
From
Daniel Perley at U.C. Berkeley <dperley@astro.berkeley.edu>
D. A. Perley, A. V. Filippenko, J. M. Silverman, R. J. Foley, M. Modjaz, 
D. Kocevski, and J. S. Bloom report:

We acquired an additional series of imaging observations of the field of 
GRB 071010A (Moretti et al., GCN 6859) with Keck I + LRIS starting at 
5:01 UT, 2007-10-16 (6.05 days after the trigger), in g and R filters.

The optical afterglow (Klotz et al. GCN 6860) has faded substantially. 
An object is observed at the GRB position, resolvable into two regions: 
a brighter, redder source to the east and a fainter, bluer source to the 
west.  Comparison with our previous Keck imaging shows the afterglow 
position to be consistent only with the fainter, western source.  The 
two sources may be a bright elongated host galaxy, a compact host galaxy 
with the afterglow offset from the center, or a foreground star with the 
afterglow coincidentally located very nearby.  An image of the field is 
posted at: http://lyra.berkeley.edu/~dperley/071010a/071010a_keck.png

Aperture photometry shows the combined complex of both sources to have a 
magnitude of R=22.5, using the same calibration system in previous 
circulars.  The contribution from the afterglow is limited to R>23.3, 
depending on the uncertain contribution of a possible bright host galaxy.

Refined photometry of our imaging starting at 2007-10-11 UT 04:47 (GCN 
6885) shows the afterglow magnitude at that time to be R = 19.82+/-0.02. 
  This indicates that the afterglow decay underwent a sharp break, from 
alpha < 0.5 between the first and second night to a minimum of alpha > 
1.7 over the following five days.

Comparison with the XRT light curve at 
http://astro.berkeley.edu/~nat/swift/00293707/bat_xrt.jpg shows the 
X-ray afterglow to have undergone a break at 10^5 seconds (roughly 
coincident with our measurement on 2007-10-11) from approximately flat 
evolution before this point to a rapidly decaying power law of alpha ~ 
1.8 afterward.  This suggests that this sharp break may be achromatic, 
and possibly indicative of a jet break.

[GCN OPS NOTE(18oct07):  The "and jet break" was added back on to the 
Subject-line of this circular.  It was chopped off during processing
because the mail sending/delivery system chopps wrapped Subject lines.]

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