GRB 211106A
GCN Circular 31300
Subject
GRB 211106A: Third HST Observation
Date
2021-12-24T20:01:28Z (4 years ago)
From
Charles Kilpatrick at Northwestern U <ckilpatrick@northwestern.edu>
C. D. Kilpatrick (Northwestern), E. Berger (Harvard), and W. Fong (Northwestern) report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
"We obtained a third observation at the site of the short GRB 211106A (GCNC #31049) with the Hubble Space Telescope starting on 2021 December 24.35 (48.15 days post-trigger, 29.0 days after Visit 1 - GCNC #31146, and 22.9 days after Visit 2 - GCNC #31157) using ACS/F814W for 2 orbits and WFC3/F110W for 2 orbits, as part of program 16303 (PI: Berger).
The source identified in both our previous HST observations and near the reported CXO position of GRB 211106A (GCNC #31145) is still detected, with unchanged magnitudes of m(F110W) ~ 25.6 mag and m(F814W) ~ 25.7 mag. We also detect an extension to the north of the source in stacked F814W imaging (Visit 1 + Visit 3) as previously noted in the F110W imaging (GCNC #31049). The lack of any change over this 29-day baseline, the relatively flat m(F814W)-m(F110W) color, the extension in both bands, and the small offset from the CXO position (GCNC #31145) support the hypothesis that this source is the more likely host galaxy of GRB 211106A."
GCN Circular 31259
Subject
GRB 211106A: XMM-Newton monitoring campaign detections
Date
2021-12-18T02:09:26Z (4 years ago)
From
Alicia Rouco Escorial at CIERA <alicia.rouco.escorial@northwestern.edu>
A. Rouco Escorial, W. Fong, C. D. Kilpatrick, J. Rastinejad, G. Schroeder, A. Nugent (Northwestern), E. Berger (Harvard), and T. Laskar (Radboud) report:
���We initiated our afterglow monitoring campaign, consisting of two EPIC-pn observations, with the XMM-Newton Observatory on the short-duration GRB 211106A (Tohuvavohu et al., GCN #31049) on 2021 November 20 (22:37:51 UT) and 2021 December 8 (19:46:37 UT) UT, with median observation times of ~15 and ~33 days post-trigger. The two XMM-Newton observations were obtained under the Proposal 086286 (PI: Fong), with effective exposure times of ~20 ks and ~47 ks, respectively.
In the combined XMM-Newton dataset, we detect the X-ray counterpart to GRB 211106A at the position:
RA(J2000) = 22h54m20.8s
Dec(J2000) = -53d13m50.9s
with a total positional uncertainty of 1.7 arcsec (dominated by XMM-Newton���s systematic uncertainty). The XMM-Newton position of the X-ray afterglow and the Chandra position reported by Berger et al. (2021, GCN #31145) are consistent with each other within the errors. The afterglow is detected in both epochs at a significance of ~5.5 sigma and ~3.4 sigma, with total net source counts of ~83 and ~73 (0.3-10 keV), respectively.
The XRT, Chandra and XMM-Newton afterglow unabsorbed flux, starting at ~0.5 days post-burst, can be modeled with a single power-law decline characterized by a decay index (F~t^alpha) of alpha=-1.02 (-0.06,+0.05). Additionally, from our jointly spectral fitting of both data sets, we derive an intrinsic neutral hydrogen absorption column of ~1.4E21 cm^2 for z=0.097 (Malasani et al., GCN #31075