GRB 090404
GCN Circular 9602
Subject
GRB 090404: Deep optical imaging and possible host association (correction)
Date
2009-07-02T07:38:53Z (17 years ago)
From
Daniel Perley at U.C. Berkeley <dperley@astro.berkeley.edu>
D. A. Perley (UC Berkeley) reports:
In the third paragraph of the previous circular (GCN 9601), the
reference to the extended emission possibly associated with G1 being
spread over several "arcminutes" should instead read that the emission
is spread over several arcseconds.
A g-band thumbnail image showing this emission (and the nearby "knot")
more clearly is posted to:
http://lyra.berkeley.edu/~dperley/090404/090404_g.png
GCN Circular 9601
Subject
GRB 090404: Deep optical imaging and possible host association
Date
2009-07-02T06:33:36Z (17 years ago)
From
Daniel Perley at U.C. Berkeley <dperley@astro.berkeley.edu>
D. A. Perley, S. B. Cenko, and J. S. Bloom (UC Berkeley) report:
We imaged the field of dark gamma-ray burst GRB 090404 (Ziaeepour et
al., GCN 9086) using the Keck I telescope (+LRIS) on the night of
2009-06-25 (UT) for 1670 seconds in g-band and 1560 seconds in I-band
under excellent (0.5 arcsecond) seeing and photometric conditions.
The object outside the XRT error circle mentioned by Malesani et al.
(GCN 9093, GCN 9095) is clearly detected as an extended source, likely a
moderate-redshift galaxy (hereafter "G1"). A second, slightly fainter
extended source ("G2") is also detected 3.5 arcseconds to its northeast,
and the two sources appear to be connected by faint emission, perhaps a
tidal bridge. Both sources are marginally detected in Sloan Digital Sky
Survey archival images (see also GCN 9096).
Additional faint, extended emission is detected just west of the
brighter galaxy G1. The emission appears to be spread over several
arcminutes in the g-band image, with an obvious "knot" located 1
arcsecond northeast of the millimeter afterglow position reported by
Catro-Tirado et al. (GCN 9100