GRB 220101A
GCN Circular 31648
Subject
GRB 220101A: The first example of a Petanova
Date
2022-02-25T11:38:50Z (4 years ago)
From
Remo Rufinni at ICRA <ruffini@icra.it>
R. Ruffini, Y. Aimuratov, L. Becerra, C.L. Bianco, Y-C. Chen, C. Cherubini,
Y.F. Cai, S. Eslamzadeh, S. Filippi, M. Karlica, Liang Li, G.J. Mathews, R.
Moradi, M. Muccino, G.B, Pisani, F. Rastegar Nia, J.A. Rueda, N. Sahakyan,
Y. Wang, S.S. Xue, Y.F. Yuan, Y.L. Zheng, on behalf of ICRA, ICRANet and
USTC team, report:
We confirm the results of our previous GCN (Ruffini et al. 2022, GCN
31465). Following the release of the X-ray afterglow (Tohuvavohu et al.
2022, GCN 31347) and the GeV data (Arimoto et al. 2022, GCN 31350) of this
source, we can estimate the total (keV+MeV+GeV) isotropic energy (see e.g.
Ruffini et al. 2021, MNRAS 504, 5301) to be ~6E54 erg, making this GRB the
most powerful GRB in 26 years (a "Petanova"). The period of the new neutron
star (see e.g. Ruffini et al. 2021, MNRAS 504, 5301) generating the X-ray
afterglow is ~1 ms, the initial mass of the BH (see e.g. Ruffini et al.
2019 ApJ 886, 82) is 6.15 solar mass, the spin parameter is 0.95, and the
irreducible mass is 4.98 solar masses (see Fig. 1). The peak of the
bolometric flux of supernova is of the order of 1E-17 erg/s/cm^2 and will
appear in 73+/-15 days after the GRB trigger, with emissions lasting ~ one
month peaking in different infrared bands. The observational follow up
of this source is encouraged.
Fig. 1: http://www.icranet.org/docs/GRB220101A.pdf
GCN Circular 31504
Subject
GRB 220101A: KAO optical-R observation
Date
2022-01-20T14:03:51Z (4 years ago)
From
Ahmed Fouad at NRIAG <ahmed.fouad@nriag.sci.eg>
Ahmed M. Fouad (NRIAG), Ali Takey (NRIAG), Dia Fouda (NRIAG) and
Ola Ali (NRIAG) report:
We observed the optical counterpart of GRB 220101A
(Tohuvavohu et al., GCN 31347; Arimoto et al., GCN 31350)
using 1.88-m telescope at the Kottamia Astronomical Observatory (KAO),
NRIAG, Egypt.
The source was visible at RA: 00:05:24.77, DEC: +31:46:08.7 ,
9.72 arc seconds from the XRT position.
We measured R-Bessel magnitude = 21.5 +/- 0.616
in a combined image of 3x90 seconds images taken at
17:10:00 UT on 3-Jan-2022, 60 hr after the BAT trigger.
Photometry was done based on the brightest 10 stars around the GRB in
a FoV = 8' x 8', selected from the USNO-A1.0 catalog.
The magnitude is not corrected for Galactic extinction
in the direction of the GRB.
GCN Circular 31471
Subject
GRB 220101A: TSHAO optical observation, Terskol, AbAO upper limits
Date
2022-01-17T22:02:27Z (4 years ago)
From
Alexei Pozanenko at IKI, Moscow <apozanen@iki.rssi.ru>
N. Pankov (HSE), A. Pozanenko (IKI), A. Kusakin (FAP), I. Reva (FAP), R.
Ya. Inasaridze (AbAO), V. Agletdinov (KIAM), S. Belkin (IKI, HSE), I.
Sokolov (KIAM), M. Krugov (FAP) report on behalf of GRB IKI FuN:
We observed Swift GRB 220101A (Tohuvavohu, et al., GCN 31347) also
detected by Fermi/LAT (Arimoto et al. 2022, GCN 31350), AGILE (Ursi et
al. 2022, GCN 31354), Fermi/GBM (Lesage et al. 2022, GCN 31360), and
Konus-Wind (Tsvetkova et al., GCN 31433) with Zeiss-1000 telescope of
THSAO observatory (Kazakhstan) in R-filter starting on 2022-01-05 (UT)
14:39:20. We were also observing the afterglow position with with AS-32
telescope of Abastumani observatory (AbAO) and K-800 telescope of Mnt.
Terskol observatory on 2022-01-06.
The afterglow (Tohuvavohu et al., GCN 31347; Kuin & Tohuvavohu, GCN
31351; Fu et al., GCN 31353; Hentunen et al., GCN 31356; Perley et al.,
GCN 31357; de Ugarte Postigo et al., GCN 31358; Fynbo et al., GCN 31359;
Vinko et al., GCN 31361; Tomasella et al., GCN 31363