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GRB 150210A

GCN Circular 17432

Subject
GRB 150210A: Fermi GBM detection
Date
2015-02-11T05:28:49Z (10 years ago)
From
Eric Burns at U of Alabama <eb0016@uah.edu>
E. Burns (UAH) reports on behalf of the Fermi GBM Team:

"At 22:26:24.28 UT on 10 February 2015, the Fermi Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor
triggered and located GRB 150210A (trigger 445299987 / 150210935).

The on-ground calculated location, using the GBM trigger
data, is RA = 112.9, DEC = +12.4 (J2000 degrees,
equivalent to 07 h 31 m, 12 d 22 '), with an uncertainty
of 2.2 degrees (radius, 1-sigma containment,
statistical only; there is additionally a systematic
error which is currently estimated to be 2 to 3 degrees).
The angle from the Fermi LAT boresight is 55 degrees.

The GBM light curve consists of a single main FRED-like peak
with a duration (T90) of about 31 s (50-300 keV).
The time-averaged spectrum from T0+0.002 s to T0+31.681 s is
best fit by a power law function with an exponential
high-energy cutoff.  The power law index is -1.05 +/- 0.01 and
the cutoff energy, parameterized as Epeak, is 3118 +/- 216 keV.

The event fluence (10-1000 keV) in this time interval is
(1.35 +/- 0.01)E-05 erg/cm^2. The 1-sec peak photon flux measured
starting from T0+1.024 s in the 10-1000 keV band
is 19.1 +/- 0.3 ph/s/cm^2.

The spectral analysis results presented above are preliminary;
final results will be published in the GBM GRB Catalog."

GCN Circular 17438

Subject
GRB 150210A: Fermi-LAT detection
Date
2015-02-11T14:16:23Z (10 years ago)
From
Sylvia J. Zhu at NASA/GSFC/UMD <sjzhu@umd.edu>
S. Zhu (UMD), E. Bissaldi (INFN Bari), J. Racusin (NASA/GSFC),
E. Sonbas (Adiyaman Univ.), D. Kocevski (NASA/GSFC),
M. Yassine (LUPM) report on behalf of the Fermi-LAT team:

At 22:26:24.28 UT on 10 February 2015, Fermi-LAT detected
high-energy emission from GRB 150210A,
which was also detected by Fermi-GBM (trigger 445299987 / 150210935)
(Burns, GCN 17432).

The best LAT on-ground location is found to be

RA, Dec = (112.15, 13.27) (J2000)

with an error radius of 0.33 deg (90% containment, statistical error only).
This position was 55 deg from the LAT boresight at the time of the trigger
and is consistent with the GBM position. It remained in the
LAT field of view for about 1000 seconds after trigger, and reentered
the field of view at T0+5000 seconds.

The data from the Fermi-LAT show a significant increase
in the event rate within 10 degrees of the GBM location after the
GBM trigger that is spatially and temporally correlated
with the GBM emission with high significance.
More than 20 photons above 100 MeV are observed in the first 100
seconds, of which ~15 photons are coincident with the GBM peak.
The highest-energy photon is a  ~1 GeV event which is observed
2 seconds after the GBM trigger. Using the LAT Low Energy (LLE)
data selection, an increase in the event rate at > 20 sigma significance
above background was observed approximately coincident with the
time of the GBM emission.

A Swift ToO has been requested for this burst.

The Fermi-LAT point of contact for this burst is Sylvia Zhu
(sjzhu@umd.edu).


The Fermi-LAT is a pair conversion telescope designed to cover
the energy band from 20 MeV to greater than 300 GeV.
It is the product of an international collaboration between
NASA and DOE in the U.S. and many scientific institutions
across France, Italy, Japan and Sweden.

GCN Circular 17439

Subject
IPN Triangulation of GRB 150210A
Date
2015-02-11T14:58:52Z (10 years ago)
From
Dmitry Svinkin at Ioffe Institute <svinkin@mail.ioffe.ru>
S. Golenetskii, R. Aptekar, V. Pal'shin, D. Frederiks,
D. Svinkin, and T. Cline on behalf of the Konus-Wind team,

K. Hurley, on behalf of the IPN,

V. Connaughton, M. S. Briggs, C. Meegan, V. Pelassa,
and A. Goldstein, on behalf of the Fermi GBM team, and

A. von Kienlin, X. Zhang, A. Rau, V. Savchenko, E. Bozzo,
and C. Ferrigno, on behalf of the INTEGRAL SPI-ACS GRB team,
report:

The long-duration, bright GRB 150210A has been detected by Fermi (GBM: 
Burns, GCN Circ. 17432; LAT: Zhu et al., GCN Circ. 17438), Konus-Wind, 
and INTEGRAL (SPI-ACS), so far, at about 80784 s UT (22:26:24).

We have triangulated it to a preliminary, 3 sigma error box whose 
coordinates are:
---------------------------------------------
   RA(2000), deg                 Dec(2000), deg
  ---------------------------------------------
  Center:
   111.853 (07h 27m 25s) +13.832 (+13d 49' 54")
  Corners:
   111.458 (07h 25m 50s) +11.396 (+11d 23' 45")
   111.572 (07h 26m 17s) +16.337 (+16d 20' 13")
   112.332 (07h 29m 20s) +16.259 (+16d 15' 31")
   112.206 (07h 28m 49s) +11.314 (+11d 18' 52")
  ---------------------------------------------
The error box area is 3.6 sq. deg, and its maximum
dimension is 5.1 deg (the minimum one is 44 arcmin).
The Sun distance was 148 deg.

The LAT (statistical-only) error circle (GCN 17438) overlaps the box. 
The distance between the center of the LAT position and the center of 
the error box is 0.63 deg.

This box may be improved.

A triangulation map is posted at
http://www.ioffe.ru/LEA/GRBs/GRB150210_T80787/IPN/

The Konus-Wind time history and spectrum will be given in a forthcoming 
GCN Circular.

GCN Circular 17440

Subject
Konus-Wind observation of GRB 150210A
Date
2015-02-11T15:04:47Z (10 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.Lysenko, and T. Cline
on behalf of the Konus-Wind team, report:

The long-duration, hard-spectrum GRB 150210A
(Fermi-GBM detection: Burns, GCN 17432;
Fermi-LAT detection: Zhu et al., GCN 17438;
IPN triangulation: Golenetskii et al., GCN 17439)
triggered Konus-Wind at T0=80787.209 s UT (22:26:27.209).

The light curve shows a bright, multi-peaked pulse with a duration
of ~3.5 s followed by a much weaker tail visible up to ~T0+30 s.
The emission is seen up to ~10 MeV.

The Konus-Wind light curve of this GRB is available at
http://www.ioffe.ru/LEA/GRBs/GRB150210_T80787/

As observed by Konus-Wind, the burst had a fluence
of 7.8(-0.8,+0.9)x10^-5 erg/cm2, and a 64-ms peak flux,
measured from T0+2.368 s, of 4.2(-0.3,+0.3)x10^-5 erg/cm2/s
(both in the 20 keV - 10 MeV energy range).

The time-averaged spectrum (measured from T0 to T0+24.832 s)
is best fit in the 20 keV - 15 MeV range
by the cutoff power law with the following model parameters:
the photon index alpha = -0.99(-0.07,+0.08),
and the peak energy Ep = 2170(-340,+440) keV,
chi2 = 107/98 dof.
Fitting this spectrum with the Band model yields the same
values of alpha and Ep with an upper limit on the high-energy
photon index beta of -2.6

The spectrum near the peak count rate (measured from T0 to T0+8.448 s)
is best fit in the 20 keV - 15 MeV range
by the cutoff power law with the following model parameters:
the photon index alpha = -0.89(-0.06,+0.06),
and the peak energy Ep = 2250(-240,+280) keV,
chi2 = 126/98 dof.

All the quoted errors are at the 90% sigma confidence level.
All the quoted values are preliminary.

GCN Circular 17441

Subject
GRB 150210A: Tiled Swift observations
Date
2015-02-11T17:01:24Z (10 years ago)
From
Phil Evans at U of Leicester <pae9@leicester.ac.uk>
P. A. Evans (U. Leicester) reports on behalf of the Swift team:

Swift has initiated a series of observations, tiled on the sky, of the
Fermi/LAT GRB 150210A. Automated analysis of the XRT data will
be presented online at http://www.swift.ac.uk/xrt_products/TILED_GRB00040

Any uncatalogued X-ray sources detected in this analysis will be
reported on this website and via GCN COUNTERPART notices. The probability of finding
serendipitous sources, unrelated to the Fermi/LAT event is high: any X-ray source
considered to be a probable afterglow candidate will be reported via a GCN Circular
after manual consideration.

Details of the XRT automated analysis methods are detailed in Evans et
al. (2007, A&A, 469, 379; 2009, MNRAS, 397, 1177 and 2014, ApJS, 210, 8).

This circular is an official product of the Swift-XRT team.

GCN Circular 17446

Subject
GRB 150210A: MASTER SN detection during LAT error box inspection
Date
2015-02-11T21:09:24Z (10 years ago)
From
Vladimir Lipunov at Moscow State U/Krylov Obs <lipunov@xray.sai.msu.ru>
O. Gres ,K.Ivanov, S.Yazev, N.M.Budnev, O.Chuvalaev, V.A.Poleshchuk
Irkutsk State University

E. Gorbovskoy, V. Lipunov, M.Pruzhinskaya,  V.Kornilov, D.Kuvshinov, 
N.Tyurina, N.Shatskiy, P.Balanutsa, D.Zimnukhov, A.Kuznetsov, V.V.Chazov, 
D.Denisenko, A.Sankovich
Lomonosov Moscow State University,
Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Moscow State University

A. Tlatov, A.V. Parhomenko, D. Dormidontov, V.Sennik
Kislovodsk Solar Station of the Pulkovo Observatory

V.Yurkov, Yu.Sergienko, D.Varda, E.Sinyakov
Blagoveschensk Educational State University, Blagoveschensk

K.Ivanov, S.Yazev, N.M.Budnev, O.Gres, O.Chuvalaev, V.A.Poleshchuk
Irkutsk State University

V.Krushinski, I.Zalozhnih,  A. Popov
Ural Federal University, Kourovka

D.Buckley, S. Potter, A.Kniazev, M.Kotze
South African Astronomical 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)



MASTER II  robotic telescope (MASTER-Net: http://observ.pereplet.ru) 
located in Kislovodsk was pointed to the  GRB150210A 22 sec after notice 
time and 1364 sec after trigger time at 2015-02-10 22:49:09 UT by FERMI 
GBM coordinates  (ra=07 31 23 dec=+12 21 33 r=2.200000) (Burns et. al . 
GCN 17432). We cover a 70% part of FERMI LAT (Zhu et al. GCN 17438) error 
box with upper limit 17.5

MASTER II  robotic telescope  located in Tunka was pointed to the 
GRB150210A 3444 sec after  the LAT notice time and 60443 sec after trigger 
time at 2015-02-11 15:13:47 UT.

During LAT error box inspectoion MASTER-Tunka auto-detection system 
discovered OT source at (RA, Dec) = 07h 29m 40.10s +14d 14m 25.5s on 
2015-02-11.64502 UT (Gres et al. ATel 17446).

The OT unfiltered magnitude is 17.4m (the limit is 20.0m). OT is located 
at a distance 0.2W 2.8N from a center on unknown galaxy.
It seems that this supernova was found by chance during the LAT error box 
inspection.
OT image available here 
http://master.sai.msu.ru/static/OT/MASTERJ072940.10+141425.5.jpg
The OT is seen in 31 images. There is no minor planet at this place.
We have reference image without OT on 2012-02-18.58510 UT with unfiltered 
magnitude limit 19.8m.

The message may be cited.

GCN Circular 17453

Subject
GRB 150210A: Swift-XRT observations
Date
2015-02-12T12:12:53Z (10 years ago)
From
Rhaana Starling at U of Leicester <rlcs1@star.le.ac.uk>
V. Mangano (PSU), M.C. Stroh (PSU), B.P. Gompertz (U. Leicester), J.P.
Osborne (U. Leicester), V. D'Elia (ASDC), M. de Pasquale (INAF-IASFPA),
A. Maselli  (INAF-IASFPA), D.N. Burrows (PSU) and P.A. Evans (U.
Leicester) report on behalf of the Swift-XRT team:

Swift-XRT has performed follow-up observations of the
Fermi/LAT-detected burst GRB 150210A (Zhu et al. GCN Circ. 17438) in a
series of observations tiled on the sky. The total exposure time is 7.3
ks, distributed over 4 tiles; the maximum exposure at a single sky
location was 4.3 ks. The data were collected between T0+66.9 ks and
T0+95.4 ks, and are entirely in Photon Counting (PC) mode. 

No uncatalogued X-ray sources have been detected. The 3-sigma upper
limit in the field (not including the regions where the tiles overlap)
ranges from ~0.004 to ~0.008 ct s^-1, corresponding to a 0.3-10 keV
observed flux of 1.5e-13 to 3.3e-13 erg cm^-2 s^-1 (assuming a typical
GRB spectrum).

A previously-catalogued X-ray source has been detected, however because
it is a catalogued object it is unlikely to be the afterglow.

The results of the XRT-team automatic analysis of the tiled XRT
observations, including a position-specific upper limit calculator, are
available at http://www.swift.ac.uk/xrt_products/TILED_GRB00040.

This circular is an official product of the Swift-XRT team.

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