GRB 080310
GCN Circular 7631
Subject
GRB080310, BVRcIc field calibration
Date
2008-04-19T14:17:49Z (18 years ago)
From
Arne A. Henden at AAVSO <arne@aavso.org>
A. Henden (AAVSO) reports:
While the field of GRB080310 has been observed by SDSS, we have also
obtained a four-night BVRcIc field calibration using the 35cm robotic
telescope at Sonoita Research Observatory. The calibration file
has a limiting magnitude around V=17, with good standards brighter
than V=11 or so. The file is available at
ftp://ftp.aavso.org/public/calib/grb/grb080310.dat
This calibration is based on numerous Landolt standards, and has
an external zeropoint error of about 0.02mag. Our system is available
for any other bright BVRI calibrations (4<V<19) for this field or any
other field; contact the author for such requests.
The AAVSO thanks the Curry Foundation for their continued support of the
AAVSO International High Energy Network, and to John Gross of SRO for
providing setup assistance for this field.
GCN Circular 7523
Subject
GRB080310, late-time photometry with LBT
Date
2008-03-26T16:22:55Z (18 years ago)
From
Peter Garnavich at U of Notre Dame <pgarnavi@nd.edu>
J. Hill (LBTO/UAz), R. Ragazzoni, A. Baruffolo (Padova), and
P. Garnavich (Notre Dame) report:
The Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) observed the position of GRB 080310
(Chornock et al. GCN 7381; Cummings et al., GCN 7382) with the
LBC red and blue cameras between March 19.3 and 19.5 (UT). Twenty
200 sec exposures in the Sloan-r filter were obtained in 1.3"
seeing and with a significant sky background from the Moon.
The combined image shows a faint source present at the position
of the afterglow. From stars calibrated in the SDSS we estimate
the brightness of the source to be r=25.4+/-0.2 mag. This is
consistent with an afterglow power-law decay index of 2.4 between
2 and 9 days after the burst (Wegner et al., GCN 7423). The
true afterglow decay rate could be steeper if host galaxy light
is contributing to the source flux.
A faint galaxy (r~24) is detected 2.1" southeast of the afterglow and
another is 3.0" to the southwest. For a redshift of 2.43 and a standard
cosmology, the projected distances from the afterglow are 17 kpc and
24 kpc. These galaxies may be the source of the two foreground absorption
line systems observed in the afterglow spectrum (Vreeswijk et al., GCN
7391