GRB 130603B
GCN Circular 15060
Subject
GRB 130603B: Second epoch of HST WFC/F160W imaging
Date
2013-08-03T11:26:03Z (12 years ago)
From
Edo Berger at Harvard <eberger@cfa.harvard.edu>
W. Fong and E. Berger (Harvard) report:
"We inspected the second epoch of HST WFC3/F160W imaging of the short GRB
130603B obtained on 2013 July 3.24 UT. Digital image subtraction relative
the first epoch (on 2013 June 13.15 UT) reveals that the near-IR point
source coincident with the afterglow position has faded away, confirming
our original suggestion that it is associated with GRB 130603B (Berger et
al. 2013 arXiv:1306.3960). The subtraction also confirms our brightness
measurement, with m(F160W)=25.8 AB mag. Coupled with an early steep
decline in the optical band based on additional Magellan/IMACS observations
at 32.2 hr post-burst, with r>24.8 AB mag (see also Cucchiara et al. 2013,
arXiv:1306.2028; Tanvir et al. 2013, arXiv:1306.4971) this confirms the
likely kilonova origin of this source."
GCN Circular 14922
Subject
GRB 130603B: First epoch of XMM-Newton observations
Date
2013-06-25T01:10:04Z (12 years ago)
From
Wen-fai Fong at CFA <wfong@cfa.harvard.edu>
W. Fong, G. Migliori, R. Margutti, and E. Berger (Harvard) report:
"We observed the short-duration GRB 130603B (Melandri et al., GCN 14735)
with XMM-Newton + EPIC-pn starting on 2013 June 06.22 UT (2.57 d after the
burst) for a total of 24 ksec. We clearly detect the X-ray afterglow at the
position of the enhanced XRT error circle (Evans et al., GCN 14739) at a
significance level of about 6-sigma.
Taken together with the Swift/XRT afterglow light curve for t>4000 sec
(Kennea et al., GCN 14749), these observations indicate a single power-law
decline with index alpha_X=-1.83+/-0.15. Therefore, the XMM observations
rule out the presence of a break at t~4000 sec to 2.57 d, in contrast to
the suggested X-ray and optical break at ~8 hr (Tanvir et al., arXiv:
1306.4971)."
GCN Circular 14913
Subject
GRB 130603B: Analogy with GRB 090510A and possible connection with a supernova
Date
2013-06-17T18:22:05Z (12 years ago)
From
Remo Rufinni at ICRA <ruffini@icra.it>
R. Ruffini, C.L. Bianco, M. Enderli, M. Muccino, A.V. Penacchioni, G.B.
Pisani, J.A. Rueda, N. Sahakyan, Y. Wang report:
After a rest-frame time of 5000 sec from the BAT trigger (Melandri et
al., GCN 14735), the late X-ray rest-frame luminosity of GRB 130603B
overlaps the one of GRB 090510A (see the figure at:
<http://www.icra.it/temp/GCN/20130614.png>). This match occurs
irrespectively of their isotropic energies, which differ by a factor of
~50 (GRB 130603B: E_iso = 2.1 * 10^51 erg, Frederiks et al., GCN 14772;
GRB 090510A: E_iso = 1.1 * 10^53 erg, Muccino et al. 2013, ApJ, in
press, arXiv:1306.3467).
According to Muccino et al. 2013, GRB 090510A is a long GRB exploded in
a high density enviroment (10^3 particles/cm^3). The similarity shown
in the plot indicates that also GRB 130603B could be a long duration
GRB observed at closer distance (z~0.35). Therefore the detection (or
not detection) of a supernova associated to GRB 130603B between
20th-23rd of June, becomes a crucial test.
Observations are strongly encouraged.
GCN Circular 14895
Subject
GRB 130603B: Detection of possible afterglow/kilonova in HST observations
Date
2013-06-14T04:35:26Z (12 years ago)
From
Edo Berger at Harvard <eberger@cfa.harvard.edu>
E. Berger and W. Fong (Harvard) report:
"We obtained the public Hubble Space Telescope ACS/F606W and WFC3/F160W
images of GRB 130603B (Tanvir et al. GCN #14893) from MAST and performed an
astrometric tie of these images relative to our afterglow images from
Magellan/IMACS (Foley et al. GCN #14745). The resulting total rms of the
astrometic fit is 33 mas. At the location of the optical afterglow we
identify an apparent point source in the WFC3/F160W image, with no
corresponding counterpart in the ACS/F606W image (the circles marking the
afterglow position have a radius of 10-sigma):
https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~eberger/GRB130603B_HST.tif
PSF-matched photometry indicates m(F160W)=25.8+/-0.2 AB mag and
m(F606W)>27.5 mag (3-sigma; the limit is consistent with Tanvir et al. GCN
#14893). At the redshift of GRB 130603B (z=0.356) these values correspond
to absolute magnitudes of M(F160W)=-15.2 mag and M(F606W)>-13.5 mag.
The red V-H>1.7 mag color is potentially in good agreement with the
afterglow g/r/i colors at early time (8.4 hr), which indicate a spectral
index of beta~-1.7 (Cucchiara et al. arXiv:1306.2028). Based on this
spectral index and the g/r/i magnitudes from Cucchiara et al., the
interpolated/extrapolated magnitudes in the HST filters at 8.4 hr are
m(F160W)=20.0 mag and m(F606W)=21.9 mag, or V-H~1.9 mag. Therefore, it is
possible that the source detected in WFC3/F160W is the fading afterglow,
indicating a decline rate of alpha_NIR~-1.6 between 8.4 hr and 9.4 days.
Incidentally, this decline rate is in good agreement with the Swift/XRT
decline rate of alpha_X~-1.6 at about 1 hr to 1 day (
http://www.swift.ac.uk/xrt_live_cat/00557310/)
Alternatively, the red V-H color and the absolute magnitude of
M(F160W)=-15.2 mag can be explained as emission from an r-process powered
"kilonova", along the recent models by Barnes & Kasen arXiv:1303.5787. For
their fiducial model (with M_ej=0.01 Msun and v_ej=0.1c), the expected
absolute magnitude in the rest-frame J-band (corresponding to observed
H-band) at an observed time of 9.4 days is about -15 mag, while the
expected magnitude in the rest-frame B-band (corresponding to observed
V-band) is exceedingly low (about -3 mag). Thus, it is possible that the
red source we detected in the WFC3/F160W image represents the first
detection of an r-process powered transient associated with a short GRB,
thereby strengthening their association with NS-NS/NS-BH mergers.
As noted by Tanvir et al. (GCN #14893) additional observations to determine
variability are essential."
GCN Circular 14893
Subject
GRB 130603B: HST limits on an underlying supernova
Date
2013-06-13T21:18:52Z (12 years ago)
From
Nial Tanvir at U.Leicester <nrt3@star.le.ac.uk>
N. R. Tanvir (U. Leicester), A. J. Levan (U. Warwick), A. S. Fruchter (STScI),
J. Hjorth (DARK/NBI) and K. Wiersema (U. Leicester) report:
We observed the location of GRB 130603B with HST/ACS and
WFC3/IR. The host galaxy is clearly resolved as a disturbed spiral,
and it appears that the GRB occurred close to a spiral
arm that seems to have been tidally distorted or drawn out
by interaction with a smaller neighbour.
Our provisional analysis finds a point-source limit of F606W>27.6,
corresponding to M_V~-14.3, at the location of the GRB. This is
approaching a factor ~100 below what would be expected if there
were a rising supernova comparable to SN1998bw, ruling out such an
association for this burst. It also rules out some part of the parameter
space of other radioactively-powered transients that have been
proposed may accompany short GRBs.
The position of the GRB lands on a region of extended emission in
the F160W (H') filter of WFC3/IR. Another epoch scheduled for a
few weeks from now will allow a deeper search for a counterpart
through image subtraction.
We thank the STScI director and staff for rapidly expediting
these observations.
GCN Circular 14865
Subject
GMRT radio observation of GRB 130603B
Date
2013-06-11T07:16:47Z (12 years ago)
From
Poonam Chandra at TIFR <poonam@ncra.tifr.res.in>
Poonam Chandra (NCRA-TIFR) reports:
We carried out Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT) observations of
GRB 130427A at 1390 GHz band on 2013 June 07.38 UT. We don't detect the
GRB in our radio observations. The 3-sigma upper limit at the GRB afterglow
position (Levan et al., GCN 14742; de Ugarte Postigo et al., GCN 14743;
Foley et al., GCN 14745; Cucchiara et al., GCN 14748) is 273 uJy.
We thank GMRT staff for making these observations possible.
--
**********************************************************************
Poonam Chandra Phone: +91 20 2571 9290
Tata Institute of Fundamental Research Email: poonam@ncra.tifr.res.in
National Center for Radio Astrophysics Home: ncra.tifr.res.in/~poonam
Post Bag 3, Pune University campus
Ganeshkhind, Pune 411 008, INDIA
GCN Circular 14772
Subject
GRB 130603B: rest-frame energetics in gamma-rays
Date
2013-06-05T18:10:23Z (12 years ago)
From
Dmitry Frederiks at Ioffe Institute <fred@mail.ioffe.ru>
D. Frederiks, on behalf of the Konus-Wind team, report:
Assuming z=0.356 (Th��ne et al., GCN 14744),
and a standard cosmology model with H_0 = 70 km/s/Mpc,
Omega_M = 0.27, and Omega_Lambda = 0.73,
we estimate the following rest-frame parameters of GRB 130603B
from the Konus-Wind observation of the burst (Golenetskii et al., GCN 14771