GRB 221009A
GCN Circular 33676
Subject
GRB 221009A: Late-time JWST Observations and Detection of Supernova Emission
Date
2023-04-23T02:40:59Z (2 years ago)
From
Peter K. Blanchard at Northwestern University <peter.blanchard@northwestern.edu>
P. K. Blanchard (Northwestern/CIERA), V. A. Villar (PSU), R. Chornock (UC Berkeley), H. Sears (Northwestern/CIERA), N. LeBaron (UC Berkeley), S. K. Yadavalli (PSU), T. Laskar (Utah), K. D. Alexander (Arizona), R. Margutti (UC Berkeley), E. Berger (Harvard/CfA), J. Barnes (UCSB), D. Siegel (U. Guelph/Perimeter), B. Metzger (Columbia and Flatiron/CCA), D. Kasen (UC Berkeley), Y. Cendes (Harvard/CfA), T. Eftekhari (Northwestern/CIERA), and J. Leja (PSU) report:
We obtained spectra at the position of the afterglow of GRB 221009A (Dichiara et al., GCN 32632; Lipunov et al., GCN 32634; Kennea & Williams, GCN 32635; Veres et al., GCN 32636; Bissaldi et al., GCN 32637) with JWST/NIRSpec under DDT program 2784 (P.I. Blanchard) starting at 2023 April 20 14:40 UT (193 observer-frame days after the burst). The spectra were taken with the G140M/F100LP and G235M/F170LP grating/filter combinations with an exposure time of 11,015 seconds in each setup. This yields a total wavelength coverage of about 1 - 3 microns.
We correct our combined G140M+G235M spectrum for Galactic extinction using the fitted extinction parameters found by Levan et al., ApJL, 946, L28 (2023). The spectrum significantly differs from a power-law continuum observed 13 days after the burst (observer frame; Levan et al., GCN 32821). This suggests that there is now significant contribution from the SN/host galaxy. We detect a broad emission line feature centered at ~1 micron (observer frame) consistent with the Ca II IR triplet from a SN, and prominent narrow, host galaxy emission lines. If confirmed by further analysis, this would represent the first identification of specific SN spectral features associated with GRB 221009A.
Further analysis is ongoing.
We thank STScI staff members Crystal Mannfolk, Leonardo Ubeda, Armin Rest and the entire JWST team for the successful implementation of this DDT program.
GCN Circular 33305
Subject
GRB 221009A: Continued Swift Observations
Date
2023-02-08T18:41:45Z (3 years ago)
From
Maia Williams at Penn State <mjw6837@psu.edu>
M. Williams (PSU) reports on behalf of the Swift Team:
Swift resumed observations of GRB 221009A on February 7 at 00:51 UTC after the end of Sun constraint, ~10 Ms after the Fermi/GBM trigger (Veres et al., GCN Circ. 32636). The X-ray afterglow is still faintly detectable (1.9 x 10^-3 counts s^-1) in a 9.4 ks XRT exposure.
Further observations are planned for this weekend.
GCN Circular 33243
Subject
GRB 221009A: radio afterglow detection with the EVN
Date
2023-02-01T10:41:25Z (3 years ago)
From
Stefano Giarratana at University of Bologna <s.giarratana@ira.inaf.it>
S. Giarratana (University of Bologna, INAF-IRA), M. Giroletti
(INAF-IRA), T. An (Shanghai A.O.), G. Anderson (Curtin University), P.
Atri (ASTRON), J. S. Bright (University of Oxford), R. Fender
(University of Oxford), G. Ghirlanda (INAF-OAB), J. K. Leung (University
of Sydney, CSIRO), B. Marcote (JIV-ERIC), M. P��rez-Torres (IAA-CSIC), L.
Rhodes (University of Oxford), O. S. Salafia (INAF-OAB), J. Yang (OSO)
On UT 2022 November 18 and 21 (40 and 43 days post-burst) we observed
the radio counterpart of GRB 221009A (Dichiara et al, GCN 32632; Veres
et al., GCN 32636) with the European VLBI Network (EVN) at a central
frequency of 8.3 and 5 GHz, respectively.
From a preliminary analysis, the source is clearly detected at both
frequencies with >30 sigma significance. The 8.3 GHz surface brightness
peak is ~1.3 mJ/beam. The synthesized beam is 0.9 x 0.5 mas (PA = 7.7
deg). The 5 GHz surface brightness peak is ~1.4 mJy/beam. The
synthesized beam is 1.7 x 0.9 mas (PA = 9.25 deg).
The source is found at a position within ~1 mas of the one previously
reported by Atri et al., GCN 32907 with the VLBA at 15.2 GHz. The offset
is most likely accounted for by systematics.
All the results presented here are preliminary. Further analysis is in
progress. We will report the final results in a forthcoming publication.
We would like to thank the directors and staff of all the EVN telescopes
for approving, executing, and processing these out-of-session ToO
observations.
The European VLBI Network is a joint facility of independent European,
African, Asian, and North American radio astronomy institutes.
Scientific results from data presented in this publication are derived
from the following EVN project code: RG013.
GCN Circular 33038
Subject
GRB 221009A: MuSCAT3 observations
Date
2022-12-10T03:40:25Z (3 years ago)
From
Mariko Kimura at RIKEN <mariko.kimura@riken.jp>
M. Kimura (RIKEN), K. Isogai (Tokyo Univ./Kyoto Univ.), M. Arimoto,
D. Yonetoku (Kanazawa Univ.),
N. Narita, M. Tamura (Tokyo Univ./Astrobiology Center),
A. Fukui�� (Tokyo Univ.), M. Ikoma (NAOJ)
We have monitored the afterglow of GRB 221009A since three days
after the Swift and Fermi alerts (GCN 32632; GCN 32636) by MuSCAT3
on the 2-meter telescope at Las Cumbres Observatory.
MuSCAT3 is multi-channel imagers with the filters of SDSS g', r', i', zs,
which is designed for observing transiting exoplanets.
https://lco.global/observatory/instruments/muscat3/
The measurements are here:
BJD���������������������������������������� Mag������ Err���� Filter
2459864.82404�� 21.33�� 0.15�� g
2459864.82404�� 20.01�� 0.03�� r
2459864.82404�� 19.48�� 0.03�� i
2459864.82404�� 18.26�� 0.01�� z
2459870.80681�� 23.55�� 0.21�� g
2459870.80681�� 21.74�� 0.05�� r
2459870.80681�� 20.47�� 0.04�� i
2459870.80681�� 19.90�� 0.03�� z
2459872.82760�� 23.64�� 0.26�� g
2459872.82760�� 21.91�� 0.07�� r
2459872.82760�� 20.82�� 0.06�� i
2459872.82760�� 20.22�� 0.05�� z
2459876.80690�� 23.99�� 0.34�� g
2459876.80690�� 21.96�� 0.09�� r
2459876.80690�� 21.00�� 0.08�� i
2459876.80690�� 20.50�� 0.07�� z
By plotting these data with the other optical measurements reported to GCN
(GCNs 32625, 32640, 32644, 32645, 32646, 32652, 32659, 32662, 32666,
32667, 32670, 32678, 32679, 32692, 32693, 32705, 32709, 32729, 32730,
32743, 32750