GRB 211211A
GCN Circular 31299
Subject
GRB 211211A: observations with the 3.6m Devasthal Optical Telescope
Date
2021-12-24T16:40:23Z (4 years ago)
From
Rahul Gupta at ARIES, India <rahulbhu.c157@gmail.com>
Rahul Gupta, S. B. Pandey, A. Ror, A. Kumar, A. Aryan, Dimple, A. Ghosh, B.
Kumar, and K. Misra (ARIES) as a part of larger international collaboration:
We performed late-time photometric observations of the optical afterglow (Zheng
and Filipenko GCN 31203) of Fermi (Fermi GBM team, GCN 31201) and Swift (D'Ai
et al., GCN 31202) detected GRB 211211A using the 4Kx4K CCD Imager (Pandey
et al. 2017, arXiv:1711.05422v1) mounted at the axial port of the 3.6m
Devasthal Optical Telescope of ARIES Nainital at multiple epochs in several
filters. We report the preliminary brightness of the afterglow to be R =
21.66 +/- 0.07 mag ~ 1.41 days after the GBM trigger. At successive epochs,
we obtained the limiting mag of 23.7 mag ~ 4.42 days post-burst. Our
observations are consistent with the rapid decay nature of the afterglow
reported by de Ugarte Postigo et al. GCN 31229 and A. Moskvitin et al. GCN
31234.
The magnitude value reported is calibrated against UNSO B1 nearby stars.
This circular may be cited. 3.6m Devasthal Optical Telescope (DOT) is
the recently commissioned facility in the Northern Himalayan region of
India (long:79 41 04E, lat:29 21 40N, alt:2540m) owned and operated by the
Aryabhatta Research Institute of Observational Sciences (ARIES), Nainital (
https://www.aries.res.in). Authors of this GCN circular thankfully
acknowledge consistent support from the staff members to run and maintain
the 3.6m DOT.
GCN Circular 31264
Subject
GRB 211211A: MMT/MMIRS Observations Indicate Fading of K-band Source
Date
2021-12-18T21:26:07Z (4 years ago)
From
Wen-fai Fong at Northwestern U <wfong@northwestern.edu>
J. Rastinejad, W. Fong (Northwestern), A. J. Levan, D. B. Malesani (Radboud), J. Jencson, D. Sand (U. Arizona), N. R. Tanvir (Leicester) report:
We observed the location of GRB 211211A (D���Ai et al., GCN 31202) with the MMT and Magellan Infrared Spectrograph (MMIRS) instrument mounted on the MMT 6.5-meter telescope on Mount Hopkins, Arizona. At a mid-time of 2021 December 18.52 UT (~6.9 days post-burst), we obtained 126 x 30 s of K-band imaging at a median airmass of 1.5 and seeing of 0.8 arcsec. A faint K-band source is still detected at the location of the optical afterglow (first reported by Zheng & Fillipenko; GCN 31203). Based on calibration to 2MASS, we estimate a preliminary magnitude for the source of K_AB ~ 24 mag, although we caution that the faintness of the source precludes a precise measure at this time. Visual inspection relative to our Gemini K-band imaging (Levan et al. GCN 31235) is in support of clear fading of the source.
Taken at face value, the K-band source has declined by ~1.5 mag between ~4 and 7 days post-burst, while AT2017gfo only faded by ~0.4 mag in the K band (Villar et al., 2017, ApJL, 851, L21) on these same timescales.
Further observations are planned. We thank Joannah Hinz and ShiAnne Kattner at MMT for the rapid planning and execution of these observations.
GCN Circular 31242
Subject
GRB 211211A: TNG NIR observations
Date
2021-12-16T12:40:41Z (4 years ago)
From
Paolo D'Avanzo at INAF-OAB <pda.davanzo@gmail.com>
P. D'Avanzo (INAF-OAB), A. Rossi (INAF-OAS), D. B. Malesani (Radboud), V. D'Elia (ASI-SSDC), A. Melandri (INAF-OAB),
M. De Pasquale (Univ. Messina), S. Piranomonte (INAF-OAR), G. Andreuzzi, A. Garcia de Gurtubai (INAF-TNG)
on behalf of the CIBO collaboration report:
We observed the field of GRB 211211A (D���Ai et al., GCN Circ. 31202) with the Italian 3.6m TNG telescope equipped with the
near-infrared camera NICS. A series of images were obtained with the H filter on 2021-12-16 from 05:51:36 UT to 07:00:51 UT
(i.e. at a mid time of about 4.7 days after the burst).
No source is detected at the optical and NIR counterpart position (Zheng & Filippenko, GCN Circ. 31203; Levan et al., GCN Circ.
31235) down to the following 3sigma upper limit:
H > 20.5 (Vega) or H > 21.9 (AB)
(calibrated against the 2MASS catalogue).
GCN Circular 31236
Subject
GRB 211211A: Insight-HXMT/HE detection
Date
2021-12-16T06:44:10Z (4 years ago)
From
Y Q Zhang at IHEP <yqzhang@ihep.ac.cn>
Y. Q. Zhang, S. L. Xiong, X. B. Li, C. Cai, Q. Luo, S. Xiao,
J. C. Liu, W. C. Xue, Q. B. Yi, C. Zheng���Y. Huang, C. K. Li,
G. Li, J. Y. Liao, X. Y. Song, S. L. Xiong, C. Z. Liu,
X. F. Li, Z. W. Li, Z. Chang, A. M. Zhang, Y. F. Zhang,
X. F. Lu, C. L. Zou (IHEP), Y. J. Jin, Z. Zhang (THU),
T. P. Li (IHEP/THU), F. J. Lu, L. M. Song,
M. Wu, Y. P. Xu, S. N. Zhang (IHEP),
report on behalf of the Insight-HXMT team:
At 2021-12-11T13:09:59.500 (T0), Insight-HXMT/HE detected
GRB 211211A (trigger ID: HEB211211548) in a routine search of the data,
which also triggered Fermi/GBM (Fermi GBM Team, GCN #31201),
Swift/BAT (D'Ai A. et al., GCN #31202),
CALET (Tamura T. et al., GCN #31226) and
INTEGRAL/SPI-ACS (Minaev P. et al., GCN #31230)
URL_LC: http://twiki.ihep.ac.cn/pub/HXMT/GRBList/HEB211211548_lc.jpg
It should be noted that there is a significant saturation effect (data loss)
during bright parts of this GRB in HXMT.
All measurements above are made with the CsI detectors operating in the
regular mode with the energy range of about 80-800 keV (deposited energy).
Only gamma-rays with energy greater than about 200 keV can penetrate
the spacecraft and leave signals in the CsI detectors installed inside
of the telescope.
Insight-HXMT is the first Chinese space X-ray telescope, which was
funded jointly by the China National Space Administration (CNSA) and
the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS).
More information about it could be found at:
http://www.hxmt.org.
GCN Circular 31235
Subject
GRB 211211A - Gemini K-band detection
Date
2021-12-15T21:19:50Z (4 years ago)
From
Andrew Levan at U.of Leicester <a.levan@astro.ru.nl>
A.J. Levan (Radboud), J. Rastinejad (Northwestern), B. Gompertz (Birmingham), W. Fong (Northwestern), D. B. Malesani (Radboud), M. Nicholl (Birmingham) report for a larger collaboration:
���We obtained K-band observations of GRB 211211A (D���Ai et al., GCN 31202) with the Gemini-North Telescope and NIRI. Observations began at 14:40 UT on 15 Dec 2021 (~4 days after the GRB). A total of 900 s of exposure were obtained.
At the location of the afterglow identified by Zheng & Fillipenko (GCN 31203) we clearly detect a K-band source. Photometry is complicated by the narrow field of view, however, using the 2MASS source at RA, DEC(J2000)=14:09:08,86, 27:53:54.4 with a magnitude of K=12.8, we determine an afterglow magnitude of K = 20.5 +/- 0.1 (Vega) or 22.4 +/- 0.1 (AB). This magnitude is substantially brighter than expected for afterglow emission given the rapid decay observed in the i-band (de Ugarte Postigo et al., GCN 31229), and the relatively blue colours and spectra of the source at earlier times (Malesani et al., GCN 31221; Belles & D���Ai, GCN 31222).
The rapid fading and relative faintness in the optical apparently rules out a classical long-GRB at z = 0.076, since a supernova akin to those seen in long GRBs at this epoch would have i ~ 20, 4 magnitudes brighter than observed by de Ugarte Postigo et al. (GCN 31229