GRB 140629A
GCN Circular 16518
Subject
GRB 140629A: SAO RAS Rc band photometry
Date
2014-07-04T05:57:05Z (11 years ago)
From
Vladimir Sokolov at SAO RAS <sokolov@sao.ru>
A.S. Moskvitin, V.N. Komarova, T.N. Sokolova, V.V. Sokolov (SAO RAS,
N. Arkhyz), on behalf of a larger collaboration, report:
We observed the GRB 140629A field (Lien et al., GCNC 16477)
with the 1-m SAO RAS telescope Zeiss-1000 on June, 30.
Observations started at 21:21:36 and ended at 23:48:49 UT.
22 x 300 sec. images in the Rc filter were obtained under good weather
conditions.
Unlike the previous night, the OT is not visible in single images,
but is clearly detectable in the stacked image. Based on the same
USNO-B1 star (Moskvitin et al., GCNC 16499; Bikmaev et al., GCNC 16482)
with R1_mag = 16.49, we measured the OT magnitude as R = 22.1 +/- 0.2
on the phase 1.35 days after the trigger.
GCN Circular 16517
Subject
GRB 140629A, Optical observations
Date
2014-07-04T04:08:29Z (11 years ago)
From
Shashi Bhushan Pandey at ROTSE <shaship@umich.edu>
S. B. Pandey and Brajesh Kumar (ARIES Nainital India,on behalf of larger
Indian GRB collaboration)
We observed the Swift GRB 140629A field (Lien et al., GCNC 16477) using
1.04m ST telescope at ARIES Nainital. Observations were started at 17:40:59
UT on 2014-06-29 (approximately 3.4 h after the burst). Several frames
with an exposure time of 300 s each in R_c and I_c bands were obtained in
good sky conditions.
The optical counterpart of GRB 140629A (Lien et al., GCNC 16477;
Yurkov et al., GCNC 16478; Bikmaev et al., GCNC 16482; Masi, GCNC
16483; ) is clearly detected in each individual frames.
Preliminary photometry is following:
-----------------------------------------------
UT Exp_time Filter Mag
------------------------------------------------
17:40:59 300 s R_c 18.01 +- 0.05
17:56:21 300 s I_c 17.92 +- 0.06
------------------------------------------------
The photometry was performed in comparison to nearby USNO stars.
This massage may be cited
GCN Circular 16501
Subject
GRB 140629A: MITSuME Akeno Optical observation
Date
2014-07-02T06:24:29Z (11 years ago)
From
Taketoshi Yoshii at Tokyo Tech <yoshii.t.ac@m.titech.ac.jp>
Y. Yano, T. Yoshii, Y. Saito, Y. Tachibana, H. Ohuchi,
S. Kurita, Y. Ono, T. Fujiwara, Y. Yatsu, and N. Kawai (Tokyo Tech)
report on behalf of the MITSuME collaboration:
We observed the field of GRB 140629A (A. Y. Lien et al., GCN Circular #16477) with the
optical three color (g', Rc, and Ic) CCD cameras attached to the MITSuME 50 cm
telescope of Akeno Observatory, Yamanashi, Japan.
The observation started on 2014-06-29 14:23:32 UT (6 min after the burst).
We detected the previously reported optical afterglow of GRB140629A
(V.Yurkov et al., GCN Circular #16478) in the g', Rc and Ic band.
The measured magnitudes are listed below.
T0+[sec] MID-UT T-EXP[sec] g' Rc Ic
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
362 14:24:02 60.0 15.06+/-0.04 14.25+/-0.03 13.83+/-0.03
11482 17:43:45 600.0 18.77+/-0.23 18.06+/-0.16 17.67+/-0.21
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T0+ : Elapsed time after the burst
T-EXP: Total Exposure time
We used GSC2.3 catalog for flux calibration.
GCN Circular 16500
Subject
GRB 140629A: MASTER-Net preliminary light curve
Date
2014-07-01T15:21:21Z (11 years ago)
From
Vladimir Lipunov at Moscow State U/Krylov Obs <gcncirc@observ.inetcomm.ru>
E. Gorbovskoy (Lomonosov Moscow University)
V. Krushinski (Ural Federal State University)
M. Pruzhinskaya (Lomonosov Moscow University)
P.Balanutsa, A.Kuznetsov, V.V.Chazov, N.Tyurina, D.Denisenko
Lomonosov Moscow State University,
Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Moscow State University
V.Yurkov, Yu.Sergienko, D.Varda, E.Sinyakov, A. Gabovich
Blagoveschensk Educational State University, Blagoveschensk
K.Ivanov, S.Yazev, N.M.Budnev, O.Gres, O.Chuvalaev, V.A.Poleshchuk
Irkutsk State University
I.Zalozhnih, A. Popov
Ural Federal University, Kourovka
A. Tlatov, A.V. Parhomenko, D. Dormidontov, V.Sennik
Kislovodsk Solar Station of the Pulkovo Observatory
Hugo Levato and Carlos Saffe
Instituto de Ciencias Astronomicas, de la Tierra y del Espacio (ICATE)
Claudio Mallamaci, Carlos Lopez and Federico Podest
Observatorio Astronomico Felix Aguilar (OAFA)
Three MASTER system telescopes located in Blagoveshchensk, Tunka and
Kislovodsk have observed GRB140629A (Lien et al., GCN 16477) from 33
seconds till ~9 hours after the trigger. MASTER II robotic telescope
(MASTER-Net: http://observ.pereplet.ru) located in Blagoveschensk was
pointed to GRB140629A 15 sec after notice time and 33 sec after
trigger time at 2014-06-29 14:18:03.188 UT and found OT in SWIFT
error-box. MASTER II Tunka was pointed to GRB140629A 78 sec after
trigger time at 2014-06-29 14:18:48.102 UT on the evening twilight sky
(Sun ~5 d. below horizon) with dark sky observations starting ~ 50 min
after trigger time. MASTER II Kislovodsk was pointed to GRB140629A
~3.2 hours after the trigger directly after the Sun set and weather
conditions became suitable.
The preliminary light curve is available here:
http://master.sai.msu.ru/static/GRB/GRB140629A_slope2.png
The optical transient (Lien et al., GCN 16477; Yurkov et al., GCN
16478; Moskvitin et al., GCN 16489; Bikmaev et al., GCN 16482; Masi,
GCN 16483; Maehara, GCN 16484; Malesani et al., GCN 16485; Sonbas et
al., GCN 16486 etc.) has a maximum at ~ 150 sec. after the burst,
reaching 13.8 mag, after which it shows a power law decay. The power
law index (alpha) from 200 to 10000 seconds after the trigger is 1.12
+- 0.1 (F ~ t^-alpha).
There was no polarization more than 3% discovered on afterglow
stage.
GCN Circular 16499
Subject
GRB 140629A: SAO RAS monitoring
Date
2014-07-01T13:41:18Z (11 years ago)
From
Vladimir Sokolov at SAO RAS <sokolov@sao.ru>
A. Moskvitin (SAO-RAS, N. Arkhyz), R. Burenin (IKI, Moscow),
R. Uklein, V. Sokolov, T. Sokolova (SAO-RAS, N. Arkhyz),
on behalf of a larger collaboration, report:
We performed the photometrical monitoring of the GRB 140629A OT (Lien
et al., GCNC 16477) with two optical telescopes of SAO RAS: the 6-m
BTA (V band) and the 1-m Zeiss-1000 (BVRcIc bands) on the night of
June, 29/30. Observations started 4.1 hours after the Swift trigger.
The optical transient (Lien et al., GCNC 16477; Yurkov et al.,
GCNC 16478; Bikmaev et al., GCNC 16482; Masi, GCNC 16483; Maehara,
GCNC 16484; Malesani et al., GCNC 16485; Sonbas et al., GCNC 16486;
and other teams) is clearly detected in every single image.
On the basis of the same star from USNO-B1 as Bikmaev et al. (GCNC 16482)
with the coordinates R.A., = 16:35:59.9, Decl.= +41:51:10, J2000 and
magnitude R1_mag = 16.49 we made preliminary photometric estimations
of the OT Rc images. The results are as follows:
# Start,UT exp,s R_mag +/- err
====================================
1 19:00:41 180.00 18.02 +/- 0.05
2 19:05:38 180.00 18.20 +/- 0.05
3 19:11:11 180.00 18.45 +/- 0.07
4 19:28:39 300.00 18.25 +/- 0.04
5 20:03:55 300.00 18.53 +/- 0.04
6 20:26:36 300.00 18.58 +/- 0.04
7 20:53:25 300.00 18.87 +/- 0.04
8 22:10:17 300.00 19.00 +/- 0.05
9 22:33:32 300.00 19.11 +/- 0.05
10 22:57:16 300.00 19.00 +/- 0.05
11 23:25:27 300.00 19.31 +/- 0.09
12 23:49:07 300.00 19.38 +/- 0.11
Further analysis and observations go on.
GCN Circular 16498
Subject
GRB 140629A: additional P60 observations
Date
2014-07-01T06:22:11Z (11 years ago)
From
Daniel Perley at Caltech <dperley@astro.caltech.edu>
D. A. Perley (Caltech) and S. B. Cenko (NASA/GSFC) report:
We acquired additional imaging of the afterglow of GRB 140629A (Lien et
al., GCN 16477; Yurkov et al. GCN 16478) with the Palomar 60-inch (P60)
robotic telescope on UT 2014-07-01 between 04:23 and 04:52, acquiring
9x180s exposures in the r' filter. We measure a magnitude of:
r = 22.92 +/- 0.14 (t_mid = 1.598 days)
This indicates a relatively rapid decay index of alpha=1.87 since our
observation the previous night (see also Garnavich and Rose, GCN 16492).
GCN Circular 16496
Subject
GRB 140629A: Nishi-Harima NIR Observations
Date
2014-06-30T15:01:06Z (11 years ago)
From
Akira Arai at Nishi-Harima Astro. Obs/U of Hyogo <arai@nhao.jp>
S. Honda, Y. Takagi, A. Arai, K. Morihana (Univ. of Hyogo)
report on behalf of Nayuta team and OISTER collaboration:
We observed the field of GRB 140629A (A. Y. Lien et al., GCN 16477)
with Nishiharima Infrared Camera (NIC) attached to the Nayuta 2-m
telescope at the Nishi-Harima Astronomical Observatory.
The observations were conducted on 2014-06-29 at 14:27-15:32 UT.
We detected the near-infrared afterglow in J, H and Ks bands.
Photometric results of our observations are listed below.
We used 2MASS 16355059+4151367, 16355050+4151433, and 16355992+4151103
as reference stars for photometry.
# MID-UT Tmid-T0 T-EXP J_mag H_mag Ks_mag
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
14:34:02 0.28 600 14.1 +/- 0.2 13.3 +/- 0.1 12.7 +/- 0.2
14:51:34 0.57 600 15.1 +/- 0.2 14.2 +/- 0.1 13.6 +/- 0.2
15:08:16 0.85 600 15.6 +/- 0.2 14.8 +/- 0.1 14.1 +/- 0.2
15:22:49 1.08 480 16.0 +/- 0.2 15.1 +/- 0.1 14.3 +/- 0.2
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tmid-T0: Elapsed time after the burst (hours)
T-EXP: Total Exposure time (seconds)
--
-------------------------------------------------
Akira Arai,
Nishi-Harima Astronomical Observatory,
University of Hyogo
mail : arai@nhao.jp
-------------------------------------------------
GCN Circular 16495
Subject
Konus-Wind observation of GRB 140629A
Date
2014-06-30T12:59:28Z (11 years ago)
From
Dmitry Frederiks at Ioffe Institute <fred@mail.ioffe.ru>
S. Golenetskii, R.Aptekar, D. Frederiks, V. Pal'shin,
P. Oleynik, M. Ulanov, D. Svinkin, A. Tsvetkova, A.Lyssenko, and T. Cline
on behalf of the Konus-Wind team, report:
The long GRB 140629A (Swift-BAT trigger #602884: Lien et al., GCN 16477;
Cummings et al., GCN 16481; T0(BAT)=14:17:30 UT)
was detected by Konus-Wind in the waiting mode.
The light curve shows a double-peaked structure which started
~4 s before the BAT trigger and lasted till ~T0(BAT)+22 s.
The K-W light curve of this burst is available at
http://www.ioffe.rssi.ru/LEA/GRBs/GRB140629A/
As observed by Konus-Wind, the burst had a fluence of
(3.4 � 0.5)x10^-6 erg/cm2 and a 2.944-s peak energy flux,
measured from ~T0(BAT)+13.450 s, of (4.7 � 0.7)x10^-7 erg/cm2
(both in the 20 - 10000 keV energy range).
Modeling the KW 3-channel time-integrated spectrum
(from T0(BAT)-4.214 s to T0(BAT)+22.282 s) by a power law
with exponential cutoff (CPL) model:
dN/dE ~ (E^alpha)*exp(-E*(2+alpha)/Ep)
yields alpha = -1.42 � 0.54, and Ep = 86 � 17 keV.
Modelling the 3-channel spectrum near the peak count rate
(from T0(BAT)-13.450 s to T0(BAT)+16.394 s) by
the CPL model yields alpha = -1.50 � 0.23, and Ep = 156 � 52 keV.
Assuming the redshift z=2.275 (Moskvitin et al., GCN 16489;
D'Avanzo et al., GCN 16493)
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:
the isotropic energy release E_iso is ~4.4x10^52 erg,
the peak luminosity L_iso is ~2.0x10^52 erg/s,
and the rest-frame peak energy of the time-integrated spectrum,
Ep,i, is ~283 keV.
All the quoted errors are estimated at the 1 sigma confidence level.
All the presented results are preliminary.
GCN Circular 16494
Subject
GRB 140629A: Swift/UVOT Detection
Date
2014-06-30T11:32:49Z (11 years ago)
From
Alice Breeveld at MSSL-UCL <a.breeveld@ucl.ac.uk>
A. A. Breeveld (UCL-MSSL) and A. Y. Lien (GSFC/UMBC) report on behalf of
the Swift/UVOT team:
The Swift/UVOT began settled observations of the field of GRB 140629A
101 s after the BAT trigger (Lien et al., GCN Circ. 16477).
A fading source consistent with the XRT position (Evans et al. GCN Circ.
16479) is detected in the initial UVOT exposures. The fact that it is
not seen in uvm2 or uvw2 filters is consistent with the redshift given
by Moskvitin et al., GCN Circ. 16489 and D�Avanzo et al., GCN Circ. 16493.
The preliminary UVOT position is:
RA (J2000) = 16:35:54.42 = 248.97676 (deg.)
Dec (J2000) = +41:52:36.8 = 41.87690 (deg.)
with an estimated uncertainty of 0.42 arc sec. (radius, 90% confidence).
Preliminary detections and 3-sigma upper limits using the UVOT
photometric system (Breeveld et al. 2011, AIP Conf. Proc. 1358, 373) for
the early exposures are:
Filter T_start(s) T_stop(s) Exp(s) Mag
white 101 251 147 14.78 � 0.02
v 643 663 20 15.29 � 0.09
b 569 589 20 15.70 � 0.06
u 313 563 246 14.89 � 0.03
w1 692 712 19 17.5 � 0.3
m2 667 687 19 >17.5
w2 619 639 19 >18.0
The magnitudes in the table are not corrected for the Galactic
extinction due to the reddening of E(B-V) = 0.01 in the direction of the
burst (Schlegel et al. 1998).
GCN Circular 16493
Subject
GRB 140629A: TNG redshift confirmation
Date
2014-06-30T10:04:17Z (11 years ago)
From
Paolo D'Avanzo at INAF-OAB <paolo.davanzo@brera.inaf.it>
P. D'Avanzo (INAF-OAB), D. Malesani (DARK/NBI), V. D'Elia, L.A. Antonelli (INAF/OAR & ASI/ASDC), G. Tagliaferri (INAF-OAB), S.D. Vergani (CNRS/GEPI), A. Fiorenzano, G. Mainella (INAF/TNG) report on behalf of the CIBO collaboration:
We observed the optical afterglow of GRB 140629A (Lien et al., GCN 16477; Yurkov et al. GCN 16478) on 2014 June 30 with the 3.6m TNG telescope located in the Canary Islands, equipped with the DOLORES operated in both imaging and spectroscopic mode. The observations were carried out under poor weather conditions (clouds and calima).
In a 120 s image started at 01:41:38 UT (~11.4 hr after the GRB), the afterglow has a magnitude r = 20.4 +/- 0.1 (AB), calibrated against nearby SDSS stars.
We also obtained three optical spectra, each one lasting 1200 s, using the grism LR-B covering the wavelength range 3000 - 8000 AA. The observation started at 02:07:21 UT (~11.8 hr after the GRB). Using a preliminary wavelength calibration, in the co-added spectrum we detect several absorption lines which we interpret as due to Ly-alpha, C II (1334), C IV (1548/1550) at a common redshift of 2.29. Our result is in agreement with the redshift reported by Moskvitin et al. (GCN 16489).
GCN Circular 16492
Subject
GRB140629A: VATT optical observations
Date
2014-06-30T09:08:08Z (11 years ago)
From
Peter Garnavich at U of Notre Dame <pgarnavi@nd.edu>
P. Garnavich and B. Rose (Notre Dame)
We observed the field of GRB140629A (Lien et al. GCN 16477