GRB 131014A
GCN Circular 15364
Subject
GRB 131014A: RATIR Optical/NIR Afterglow Retraction
Date
2013-10-21T23:39:18Z (12 years ago)
Edited On
2024-11-07T19:57:33Z (a year ago)
From
Eleonora Troja at GSFC <eleonora.troja@nasa.gov>
Edited By
Vidushi Sharma at NASA GSFC/UMBC <vidushi.sharma@nasa.gov> on behalf of Leo P. Singer at NASA/GSFC <leo.p.singer@nasa.gov>
Eleonora Troja (GSFC), Nat Butler (ASU), Alan M. Watson (UNAM),
Alexander Kutyrev (GSFC), William H. Lee (UNAM), Michael G.
Richer (UNAM), Chris Klein (UCB), Ori Fox (UCB), J. Xavier Prochaska
(UCSC), Josh Bloom (UCB), Antonino Cucchiara (ORAU/GSFC), Owen
Littlejohns (ASU), Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz (UCSC), José A. de Diego (UNAM),
Leonid Georgiev (UNAM), Jesús González (UNAM), Carlos Román-Zúñiga
(UNAM), Neil Gehrels (GSFC), and Harvey Moseley (GSFC) report:
We reobserved the field of GRB 131014A (Fitzpatrick, et al., GCN 15332;
Desiante, et al., GCN 15333) with the Reionization and Transients Infrared
Camera (RATIR; www.ratir.org) on the 1.5m Harold Johnson Telescope at
the Observatorio Astronómico Nacional on Sierra San Pedro Mártir from
from 2013/10 17.36 to 2013/10 17.53 UTC (75.50 to 79.48 hours after the
GBM trigger), and again the next night from 2013/10 18.35 to 2013/10
18.53 UTC (99.18 to 103.48 hours after the GBM trigger), obtaining a
total of 2.3 hours exposure in the r and i bands and 1.0 hours exposure
in the Z, Y, J, and H bands each night.
These observations reach similar depths to prior RATIR observations of the
field (Troja, et al., GCNs 15340, 15346) in which we report a candidate
optical/NIR afterglow, albeit with marginal statistical significance.
Although the optical/NIR candidate afterglow appears fainter in the 2nd
and 3rd nights relative to our 1st night, it is similarly bright in the
4th night as on the 1st night. The co-addition of data from nights 2
through 4 yields flux levels (in all bands) statistically consistent
with those
measured on night 1. An image subtraction analysis confirms this result.
We conclude that our source is not the optical/NIR afterglow of GRB
131014A.
We thank the staff of the Observatorio Astronómico Nacional in San Pedro
Mártir.
GCN Circular 15363
Subject
IPN Triangulation of GRB 131014A
Date
2013-10-21T16:02:54Z (12 years ago)
From
Dmitry Svinkin at Ioffe Institute <svinkin@mail.ioffe.ru>
K. Hurley and J. Goldsten, on behalf of the MESSENGER NS GRB team,
S. Golenetskii, R. Aptekar, V. Pal'shin, D. Frederiks, D. Svinkin, and
T. Cline on behalf of the Konus-Wind team,
A. von Kienlin, X. Zhang, A. Rau, V. Savchenko, E. Bozzo, and C.
Ferrigno, on behalf of the INTEGRAL SPI-ACS GRB team,
K. Yamaoka, M. Ohno, Y. Hanabata, Y. Fukazawa, T. Takahashi, M. Tashiro,
Y. Terada, T. Murakami, and K. Makishima on behalf of the Suzaku WAM team,
S. Barthelmy, J. Cummings, N. Gehrels, H. Krimm, and D. Palmer, on
behalf of the Swift-BAT team, and
V. Connaughton, M. S. Briggs, C. Meegan, and V. Pelassa, on behalf of
the Fermi GBM team, report:
The long-duration, intense GRB 131014A (GCN 15332, 15338, 15348) was
observed by Fermi (GBM: trigger 403420143), Konus-Wind, INTEGRAL
(SPI-ACS), Swift (BAT), Suzaku (WAM), and MESSENGER (GRNS), at about
18540 s UT (05:09:00). The burst was outside the coded field of view of
the BAT.
The burst was localized by the Fermi-LAT to a 2290 sq. arcmin. error
circle (1 sigma, GCN 15333), and the X-ray afterglow was found by the
Swift-XRT (GCN 15335).
We have triangulated it to a 3 sigma error box whose
coordinates are:
---------------------------------------------
RA(2000), deg Dec(2000), deg
---------------------------------------------
Center:
100.286 (06h 41m 09s) -19.130 (-19d 07' 49")
Corners:
100.122 (06h 40m 29s) -19.544 (-19d 32' 39")
100.356 (06h 41m 25s) -19.177 (-19d 10' 38")
100.448 (06h 41m 48s) -18.714 (-18d 42' 52")
100.215 (06h 40m 52s) -19.083 (-19d 05' 00")
---------------------------------------------
The error box area is 251 sq. arcmin, and its maximum dimension is
53 arcmin (the minimum one is 10 arcmin).
The box area is about 10 times smaller than that of the LAT error circle
(2290 sq. arcmin.).
The reported Swift-XRT source (GCN 15339) is inside the box.
A triangulation map is posted at
http://www.ioffe.ru/LEA/GRBs/GRB131014_T18541/IPN/
Some improvement in this triangulation is possible.
GCN Circular 15351
Subject
GRB 131014A: XRT position information
Date
2013-10-18T13:30:03Z (12 years ago)
From
Phil Evans at U of Leicester <pae9@leicester.ac.uk>
P.A. Evans and J.P. Osborne (U. Leicester) report on behalf of the
Swift-XRT team
The Swift-XRT localisation of GRB 131014A has unusually significant
uncertainty, which is not included in the positions previously
circulated (GCNs 15335, 15339), or on the website. The afterglow was
detected towards the edge of two of the initial tiled pointings, and
near the centre of a dedicated follow-up pointing. Positions derived
from these individual pointings vary by up to 4" when the Swift star
tracker attitude is used. If we instead create enhanced positions (using
the UVOT to derive the astrometry) we find astrometric corrections of
~5-8", although we find significant variation between these corrections.
This suggests that there is some degeneracy in the aspect solution.
Given this variation we suggest that the XRT position should be assumed
to have an uncertainty of 6", rather than the values previously
announced or posted online. Thus the best available XRT position is
RA, Dec=100.3033, -19.0971, which is equivalent to:
RA: 06h 41m 12.80s
Dec: -19�� 05��� 49.6������
with an uncertainty of approx 6". This is the enhanced position derived
from the follow-up observation, which was centred on the afterglow.
Some low-level scatter in the aspect solutions is seen in all enhanced
positions, and is calibrated into our enhanced position errors. GRB
131014A shows an exceptionally large scatter in the aspect solutions
which is not currently understood. Futhermore, as this is a late-time
tiled follow up, where the source is faint and individual exposures are
short, the normal mechanisms which remove outlying aspect solutions
cannot be applied.
GCN Circular 15348
Subject
GRB 131014A: Suzaku WAM observation of the prompt emission
Date
2013-10-17T10:20:56Z (12 years ago)
From
Takafumi Kawano at Hiroshima U/Suzaku-HXD-WAM <tkawano@hep01.hepl.hiroshima-u.ac.jp>
T. Kawano, M. Ohno, K. Takaki, R. Nakamura, S. Furui, Y. Fukazawa(Hiroshima
U.), T. Yasuda, M. Tashiro, Y. Terada, Y. Ishida, H. Ueno, S. Sugimoto
(Saitama U.), M. Yamauchi, N. Ohmori, M. Akiyama (Univ. of Miyazaki), K.
Yamaoka (Nagoya U.), S. Sugita (Ehime U.), Y. E. Nakagawa, M. Kokubun, T.
Takahashi (ISAS/JAXA), W. Iwakiri(RIKEN), Y. Hanabata (ICRR), Y. Urata
(NCU), K. Nakazawa, K. Makishima (Univ. of Tokyo) on behalf of the Suzaku
WAM team, report:
The bright, long GRB 131014A (Fermi GBM detection: Fitzpatrick & Xiong, GCN
15332