GRB 231115A
GCN Circular 35296
Subject
GRB231115A: TURBO Pre-Burst Optical Upper Limits
Date
2023-12-06T21:42:43Z (2 years ago)
From
Robert Strausbaugh at Eastern Illinois University <rstrausbaugh@eiu.edu>
Via
email
R. Strausbaugh (Eastern Illinois University), Daniel Warshofsky (UMN), Pat Kelly (UMN), Mandeep S. S. Gill (UMN), Alexandre Toscano (UMN), Yilin Lu(UMN), Sydney Leggio (UMN), Aksinya Kamenshikova (UMN) report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
We observed M82, including the localization region for the Fermi GRB 231115A (Fermi GBM team, GCN 35035), with the Total-Coverage Ultrafast Response to Binary-Mergers Observatory (TURBO) prototype telescope in St. Paul, Minnesota, USA, as part of a high-cadence ongoing survey for transients in nearby galaxies. We visited the field 55 times on November 15 UT, with the last visit occurring at 9:06 UT in SDSS r and g bands respectively (corresponding to 6.5 hours before the GRB trigger time).
Each exposure is 30 seconds. We do not detect a source at the same location as the GROWTH-India counterpart (Kumar et al., GCN 35041) in either band.
The 3-sigma upper limits in the table below are calculated using the Pan-STARRS catalog as reference, and are not corrected for Galactic extinction.
The TURBO prototype in St. Paul consists of two co-mounted 11-inch telescopes each with a 6.6 square degree field of view.
TURBO, which is under construction, will consist of two arrays of 8 pairs of co-mounted 11-inch telescopes at two dark-sky sites: Magdalena Ridge Observatory, New Mexico, USA and Skinakas Observatory, Crete, Greece.
mjd
g upper limit (AB)
r upper limit (AB)
60262.97035880
-
16.0
60262.97244213
16.9
-
60263.00063657408
-
15.9
60263.00407407407
-
15.7
60263.007106481484
-
16.1
60263.012094907404
-
15.6
60263.015555555554
-
15.9
60263.01940972222
-
16.0
60263.02327546296
-
15.9
60263.02715277778
-
16.3
60263.03057870371
-
16.1
60263.034212962964
-
16.1
60263.03765046296
-
16.4
60263.04111111111
-
15.7
60263.04293981481
-
15.8
60263.04591435185
16.5
15.7
60263.04896990741
-
16.4
60263.05202546297
16.5
15.8
60263.055
16.5
15.6
60263.058020833334
-
15.8
60263.061006944445
-
16.0
60263.06407407407
-
15.9
60263.070497685185
-
16.3
60263.07403935185
-
16.2
60263.07748842592
-
15.8
60263.080462962964
-
16.3
60263.08472222222
-
16.1
60263.087592592594
16.5
16.4
60263.09365740741
16.4
16.3
60263.09645833333
15.9
16.5
60263.099375
-
16.4
60263.1171412037
-
16.7
60263.120150462964
16.3
16.3
60263.12315972222
-
15.4
60263.14434027778
16.6
15.6
60263.14716435185
16.0
15.7
60263.15039351852
15.7
16.1
60263.15372685185
16.5
16.0
60263.156539351854
15.8
16.0
60263.159421296295
16.0
16.3
60263.162314814814
16.6
15.8
60263.165138888886
15.8
16.8
60263.16957175926
16.3
16.2
60263.172997685186
16.4
-
60263.176516203705
16.5
16.5
60263.19818287037
16.8
15.8
60263.21885416667
16.9
16.8
60263.22230324074
17.4
17.0
60263.24633101852
17.3
16.4
60263.268900462965
17.3
16.6
60263.27537037037
16.9
16.9
60263.27885416667
17.3
17.0
60263.283229166664
17.0
16.9
60263.28666666667
16.9
17.0
60263.29603009259
17.4
16.8
GCN Circular 35175
Subject
GRB 231115A: XMM-Newton observation
Date
2023-11-24T12:25:39Z (2 years ago)
From
Sandro Mereghetti at IASF-Milano/INAF <sandro.mereghetti@inaf.it>
Via
Web form
M. Rigoselli, D. P. Pacholski, S. Mereghetti, R. Salvaterra (INAF, IASF-Milano) and S. Campana (INAF, OAB) on behalf of a larger collaboration report:
XMM-Newton carried out a target of opportunity observation of GRB 231115A (Mereghetti et al., GCN 35037; Fermi GBM Team, GCN 35035) which is likely a magnetar giant flare in the M82 galaxy (D’Avanzo et al., GCN 35036; Burns, GCN 35038) and was also detected by Glowbug (Cheung et al., GCN 35045), Insight-HXMT (Xue et al., GCN 35060), Konus-Wind (Frederiks et al. GCN 35062) and Swift/BAT (Ronchini et al., GCN 35065).
The burst location was observed with the EPIC instrument on 2023-11-16 from 08:27 UT to 21:19 UT (To+16.8 hr to To+29.7 hr). A large fraction of the ~46 ks long observation was affected by high background, resulting in cleaned exposure times of 8.4 ks for the pn camera and 19.0 and 23.6 ks for the MOS1 and MOS2 cameras, respectively.
Comparison of images in various energy ranges with those of the EPIC observations of M82 in 2021 and 2022, does not reveal any new source inside the INTEGRAL IBAS error circle (2 arcmin radius, Mereghetti et al., GCN 35037).
For about 50% of the error region, we derived a 3 sigma count rate upper limit of 0.004 pn cts/s in the 2-10 keV energy range. For an absorbed power law spectrum with photon index 2 and N_H=6.5E20 cm-2 this corresponds to about 3E-14 erg/cm2/s (2-10 keV).
Diffuse X-ray emission from the central part of M82 affects the error region, resulting in limits higher than 0.01 pn cts/s (2-10 keV) in less than 20% of the error region.
The lack of detection of an X-ray afterglow associated to GRB 231115A in the XMM-Newton observation 16.8 hours after the trigger provides further evidence that the burst is likely a magnetar giant flare in the M82 galaxy.
GCN Circular 35115
Subject
GRB 231115A: Upper limit from CALET Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor
Date
2023-11-19T05:41:13Z (2 years ago)
From
Yuta Kawakubo at Louisiana State University <kawakubo1@lsu.edu>
Via
Web form
Y. Kawakubo (LSU), A. Yoshida, T. Sakamoto, S. Sugita (AGU),
K. Yamaoka (Nagoya U), S. Nakahira (JAXA),
Y. Asaoka (ICRR), S. Torii, Y. Akaike, K. Kobayashi (Waseda U),
Y. Shimizu, T. Tamura (Kanagawa U), N. Cannady (GSFC/UMBC),
M. L. Cherry (LSU), S. Ricciarini (U of Florence),
P. S. Marrocchesi (U of Siena),
and the CALET collaboration:
The CALET Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (CGBM) was operating at
the trigger time of the short GRB 231115A
T0 = 2023-11-15 15:36:21.20 UT (Fermi GCN: #35035, #35044;
Integral GCN: #35037; Glowbug GCN #35045; Insight-HXMT/HE GCN
#35060; Konus-Wind GCN #35062; Swift-BAT GCN #35065).
No CGBM onboard trigger occurred around T0. Based on the IBAS
localization, the incident angles to HXM and SGM are 79 degrees and
85 degrees, respectively (#35037). Based on the analysis of the light
curve data with 0.125 sec time resolution, we found a hint of the burst
emission around the trigger time in HXM2 and SGM data. However, the
significance of 4.8 (HXM2) and 4.7 (SGM) sigma is below our detection
criterion to the CGBM data.
The five sigma upper limit of SGM for a 0.125 integration time is
3.0e-6 erg/cm^2/s (10 - 1000 keV), assuming a power-law with
an exponential cutoff (alpha = 0.5, Epeak = 580 keV, reference to
#35044) and the IBAS position.
The CALET data used in this analysis are provided by
the Waseda CALET Operation Center located at Waseda University.
GCN Circular 35092
Subject
GRB 231115A: Wendelstein Optical/Infrared Observations
Date
2023-11-18T04:18:45Z (2 years ago)
From
Antonella Palmese at Carnegie Mellon University <apalmese@andrew.cmu.edu>
Via
Web form
Lei Hu (CMU), Malte Busmann (LMU), Daniel Gruen (LMU), Antonella Palmese (CMU), Brendan O’Connor (CMU), Arno Riffeser (LMU/MPE), Ananya Shankar (LMU), Raphael Zoeller (LMU) report:
We observed the position of GRB 231115A (Fermi GBM team, GCN 35035) with the 2m Fraunhofer telescope at Wendelstein Observatory, Germany. Observations were obtained using the 3kk imager in the r, i, and J bands simultaneously, and then in r, i, and H bands. Observations started on 2023-11-16 at 00:39 UT with a total exposure time of 7200 seconds in r and i, and 3600 seconds in J, H.
We performed difference imaging in r band with deep archival Wendelstein Wide Field Imager observations of M82 using the SFFT pipeline (Hu et al. 2022). We do not detect any source at the location of GIT231115AA / AT2023xvj (Kumar et al, GCN 35041) to depth r> 22.5 (5sigma depth). We identify 2 new sources:
Name | RA (J2000 deg) | dec (J2000 deg) | r (AB mag)
----------------------
W231115a | 148.9711390 | 69.6730597 | 20.54 +/- 0.04
W231115b | 148.9950500 | 69.6912555 | 21.26 +/- 0.08
W231115a is also detected in i, J, and H, while W231115b is only detected in r and i. We cannot exclude that these are variable objects associated with previously detected sources in archival HST data. Further analysis is underway.
The magnitudes are not corrected for Milky Way extinction and the photometry was calibrated against nearby stars in the PS1 and 2MASS catalogs. We thank the staff of the Wendelstein Observatory for obtaining these observations.
GCN Circular 35091
Subject
GRB 231115A: JinShan optical upper limits
Date
2023-11-18T02:05:01Z (2 years ago)
From
Dong Xu at NAOC/CAS <dxu@nao.cas.cn>
Via
email
J. An, S.Q. Jiang, X. Liu, S.Y. Fu, Z.P. Zhu, T.H. Lu, D. Xu (NAOC), J.Z. Liu (XAO) report on behalf of a large collaboration:
We observed the field of GRB 231115A detected by the Fermi GBM (Fermi GBM Team, GCN 35035), INTEGRAL (Mereghetti et al., GCN 35037), and Glowbug (Cheung et al., GCN 35045), using two 50cm telescopes (50A, 50B) located at Altay, Xinjiang, China. Observations started at 17:30:51 UT on 2023-11-15, i.e., 1.91 hr after the Fermi/GBM trigger, in the Sloan g-/r-/i-/z- bands.
No credible optical transient is detected in our stacked images within and beside the error region of the INTEGRAL. Preliminary results are as follows:
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Tmid(UT) exp(s) filter UL(3-sigma)
-----------------------------------------------------------------
2023-11-15T17:47:17 60sx30 g 20.4
2023-11-15T18:20:18 60sx30 r 20.3
2023-11-15T18:34:16 30sx60 i 18.1
2023-11-15T17:54:39 30sx66 z 16.0
-----------------------------------------------------------------
calibrated with nearby PanSTARRS stars. The magnitude is not corrected for Galactic extinction. The z-band upper limit is shallower than expected due to a technical issue.
Altay Astronomical Time-Domain Project (JinShan Project for short) consists of four 50cm telescopes with FOV of 1.7x1.7 deg^2 for each (50A, 50B, 50C, and 50D), two 100cm telescopes with FOV of 1.4x1.4 deg^2 for each (100A and 100B), and one 100cm telescope with FOV of 14x14 arcmin^2 (100C). Each telescope is equipped with different filters. JinShan is now at its early commissioning stage.
GCN Circular 35078
Subject
GRB 231115A : OHP/T120 optical upper limit
Date
2023-11-17T14:17:47Z (2 years ago)
From
Damien Turpin at CEA-Saclay <dturpin-astro@hotmail.com>
Via
Web form
D. Turpin (CEA Paris-Saclay), W. Thuillot (Obs. Paris/IMCCE), D. Souami (Obs. Paris/LESIA), C. Adami (LAM), E. Le Floc'h, D. Götz, F. Schüssler (CEA Paris-Saclay), A. de Ugarte Postigo (OCA/CNRS), S. Basa (Pytheas/OHP/LAM), S. D. Vergani (GEPI, Obs. de Paris), report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
We observed the field of GRB 231115A, likely a Giant flare from a magnetar in M82 (Fermi GBM Team, GCN 35035; Mereghetti et al., GCN 35037, Dalessi et al. GCN 35044, Cheung et al. GCN 35045, Xue et al., GCN 35060, Frederiks et al. GCN 35062) using the T120cm telescope at Observatoire de Haute-Provence (France). We began our observations of the M82 field on 2023 15 November 22:57:23.78 (~7.35h after the INTEGRAL trigger time) with a series of R-band (1400s), V-band (600s) and sdss-i (300s) images. The limiting magnitudes of our images are R> 21.1, V>20.9 and i>19.2 but are strongly reduced in the vicinity of M82 due to its bright diffuse background light.
After inspecting our residual images from the subtraction of both the PS1 catalog images and our archival own M82 images, we do not detect any new source inside the INTEGRAL localization. We also do not detect any credible counterpart at the location of the transient candidate reported by Kumar et al. GCN 35041.
The photometric calibration was performed using nearby stars from the PanSTARRS catalog and the magnitude is not corrected for Galactic extinction.
We acknowledge the excellent support from Observatoire de Haute-Provence.
GCN Circular 35077
Subject
GRB 231115A: optical observations from INAF observatories
Date
2023-11-17T13:48:03Z (2 years ago)
From
Paolo D'Avanzo at INAF-OAB <pda.davanzo@gmail.com>
Via
legacy email
P. D'Avanzo (INAF-OAB), A. Reguitti (INAF-OAB / INAF-OAPd), L. Tomasella (INAF-OAPd), E. Cappellaro (INAF-OAPd), M. T. Botticella (INAF-OAC), F. Onori (INAF-OAAb), L. Tartaglia (INAF-OAAb), F. De Luise (INAF OAAB), M. G. Bernardini (INAF-OAB), S. Campana (INAF-OAB), S. Covino (INAF-OAB), V. D'Elia (ASI/SSDC & INAF/OAR), M . De Pasquale (Univ. of Messina), D. B. Malesani (DAWN/NBI & Radboud Univ.), E. Palazzi (INAF-OAS), A. Rossi (INAF-OAS), R. Salvaterra (INAF-IASF Mi), G. Tagliaferri (INAF-OAB), A. Melandri (INAF-OAR), E. Brocato (INAF-OAAb), M. Pedani, C. P. Padilla-Torres (INAF/TNG) report on behalf ot the CIBO and of the GRAWITA collaborations:
We carried out follow-up optical observations of the high-energy event detected by Fermi/GBM, INTEGRAL, Glowbug, Insight-HMXT/HE, Konus-Wind, Swift/BAT on 2023-11-15 at 15:36:21 UT, initially classified as the short/hard GRB 231115A and subsequently as a likely magnetar giant flare located in the M82 galaxy (Fermi GBM team, GCN Circ. 35035; D'Avanzo et al., GCN Circ. 35036; Mereghetti et al., GCN Circ. 35037; Dalessi et al., GCN Circ. 35044; Cheung et al., GCN Circ. 35045; Xue et al. GCN Circ. 35060; Frederiks et al., GCN Circ. 35062; Ronchini et al., GCN Circ. 35065).
Observations from the INAF - Padova Astronomical Observatory located in Asiago (Italy) have been carried out with the Schmidt telescope starting on 2023-11-15 at 20:40:03 UT (~ 5 hours after the event T0) with the g, r and i filters.
Preliminary analysis, which includes image subtraction with SDSS templates, does not show evidence for promising candidate counterparts within the INTEGRAL error circle (Mereghetti et al., GCN Circ. 35037).
The typical 3sigma limiting AB magnitudes at the position of the candidate counterpart AT2023xfj (Kumar et al., GCN Circ. 35041 and 35055) are g ~ 19.5 mag, r ~ 18.4 mag and i ~ 20.3 mag.
Observations the from INAF - Abruzzo Astronomical Observatory located in Campo Imperatore (Italy) have been carried out starting on 2023-11-15 at 21:38:00 UT (~ 6 hours after the event T0) with the g, i and z filters.
Preliminary analysis, which includes image subtraction with SDSS templates, does not show evidence for promising candidate counterparts within the INTEGRAL error circle.
The typical 3sigma limiting AB magnitudes at the position of the candidate counterpart AT2023xfj are g ~ 18.7 mag, i ~ 17.2 mag and z ~ 17.2 mag.
Observations the from INAF - TNG located in Canary Islands (Spain) have have been carried out starting on 2023-11-16 at 03:27:28 UT (~ 12 hours after the event T0) with the r, i and z filters.
Preliminary analysis, which includes image subtraction with SDSS and archival TNG templates, does not show evidence for promising candidate counterparts within the INTEGRAL error circle.
The typical 3sigma limiting AB magnitude at the position of the candidate counterpart AT2023xfj in the r filter is of ~ 22.0 mag.
GCN Circular 35070
Subject
GRB 231115A: Non-detection of radio emission with CHIME/FRB
Date
2023-11-17T00:23:15Z (2 years ago)
From
alice.curtin@mail.mcgill.ca
Via
Web form
Alice P. Curtin (McGill University) for the CHIME/FRB Collaboration:
At 15:36:21 UTC on 15 November 2023, GRB 231115A was detected by Fermi/GBM (Fermi GBM Team, GCN 35035 & 35044), INTEGRAL (P. D'Avanzo et al., GCN 35036, S. Mereghetti et al., GCN 35037), Glowbug (C. C. Cheung et al., GCN 35045), and Insight-HXMT (Insight-HXMT team, GCN 35060). The position of GRB 231115A (RA=149.00, DEC=69.68 with an uncertainty of 2 arcmin) is consistent with that of the M82 galaxy (S. Mereghetti et al. GCN 35037). Additionally, the spectrotemporal properties of GRB 231115A suggest it is likely due to a magnetar giant flare (Fermi/GBM Team, GCN 35044, S. Ronchini et al., GCN 35065).
At the time of the high-energy (HE) emission, GRB 231115A was ~20 degrees from the meridian of the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment Fast Radio Burst Project (CHIME/FRB). No radio emission was detected from the source at the time of the HE emission. In addition to searching for radio emission at the time of the Fermi/GBM trigger, we also searched within the CHIME/FRB database for bursts from this position within the last two years, yet did not find any definitive astrophysical associations.
Using a pipeline described in Curtin et al. (2023), we constrain the FRB-like radio emission from this source in the 400-800 MHz band to be <260 Jy or <720 Jy ms (assuming a 10 ms pulse width) at the time of the Fermi/GBM trigger. The HE fluence reported by Fermi/GBM in the 10-1000 keV range is (6.3 +/- 0.4)e-7 erg/cm^2 (Fermi/GBM Team, GCN 35044). This implies a radio-to-HE emission ratio of <4.5e-9 (unitless assuming a 400 MHz bandwidth). Additionally, using a luminosity distance of 3.5 Mpc to the M82 galaxy (P. D'Avanzo et al. 2023, GCN 35036), our derived radio flux limit corresponds to an upper limit on the radio luminosity of <3.8e30 erg s^-1 Hz^-1.
While GRB 231115A was ~20 degrees from the meridian of CHIME/FRB at the time of the Fermi/GBM trigger, it transited directly overhead CHIME/FRB at 14:18:45 UTC on 15 November 2023. Thus, our best radio constraints for this source are ~80 minutes prior to the Fermi/GBM trigger. As no radio emission was similarly detected at this time, we constrain the radio flux at this time to be <0.5 Jy and the fluence to be <1.2 Jy ms assuming a burst width of 10 ms. This corresponds to a radio luminosity limit of <7.3e27 erg s^-1 Hz^-1 and a radio-to-HE fluence ratio of <7.6e-12 (unitless assuming a 400 MHz bandwidth).
References
Curtin, A.P., Tendulkar, S.P., Josephy, A., et al., 2023, ApJ, 954, 154. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ace52f
GCN Circular 35068
Subject
MAGIC observation of GRB 231115A, a possible magnetar giant flare
Date
2023-11-16T22:40:37Z (2 years ago)
From
dpaneque@mppmu.mpg.de
Via
Web form
The MAGIC telescopes observed GRB 231115A (RA:09:56:00.22, Dec:+69:40:48.00), a candidate Magnetar Giant Flare from M82 (GCN 35044) after the alert issued by INTEGRAL (GCN/INTEGRAL NOTICE 10427). The observations in the very-high-energy (VHE; >100 GeV) range were performed on the night of November 15th starting at ~T0+8h, for about 2 hours, at large zenith angles. The fast and preliminary analysis does not show any significant detection (<2 sigma) above 250 GeV. The preliminary integral flux upper limit (95% confidence level) at 300 GeV is 8e-12 cm-2 s-1.
The contact persons for the MAGIC collaboration are Alicia López-Oramas (alicia.lopez@iac.es), Alessandra Lamastra (alessandra.lamastra@inaf.it) and Giuseppe Silvestri (giuseppe.silvestri@studenti.unipd.it). MAGIC is a system of two 17m-diameter Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescopes located at the Observatory Roque de Los Muchachos of the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (IAC) on the Canary island of La Palma, Spain (https://magic.mpp.mpg.de).
GCN Circular 35067
Subject
GRB231115A: Liverpool Telescope imaging
Date
2023-11-16T22:13:56Z (2 years ago)
From
Daniel Perley at Liverpool JMU <d.a.perley@ljmu.ac.uk>
Via
Web form
D. A. Perley (LJMU), K.-R. Hinds (LJMU), J. Wise (LJMU), V. Karambelkar (Caltech), T. F. Ahumada (Caltech), and M. M. Kasliwal, (Caltech) report:
We obtained optical imaging of M82, the potential host of GRB 231115A (Fermi GBM Team, GCN 35035; Mereghetti et al., GCN 35037), using the IO:O imager on the 2m Liverpool Telescope. Two exposures of 195s each were taken in the g, r, i, and z filters between 03:45 and 04:14 on 2023-11-16 (UT), approximately 0.5 days after the GRB. Conditions were generally good throughout.
We performed image subtraction of the g-band and z-band images using Pan-STARRS 1 survey images as a reference. The PS1 r-band and i-band images show artifacts at the location of the potential optical source AT2023xfj reported by Kumar et al. (GCN 35041) and were unsuitable (see also Kumar et al., GCN 35055), so references were taken from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey for these filters instead.
We do not detect a source at the location of AT2023xfj, to approximate limits (3-sigma) of g>21.9, r>21.6, i>21.7, z>21.0 mag (AB). There are no other candidate transients detected in the difference image consistent with the disk of M82, with the possible exception of a red source at RA=09:55:53.079, +69:40:23.28 (J2000). However, this source is also visible as a point source in the reference images, suggesting it may be a foreground variable. The effective limiting magnitude of the subtraction is significantly shallower in the innermost regions of M82 due to the variable background.
GCN Circular 35066
Subject
GRB 231115A: NuSTAR Follow-Up Observations
Date
2023-11-16T18:55:44Z (2 years ago)
From
Brian Grefenstette at Caltech/NuSTAR <bwgref@srl.caltech.edu>
Via
Web form
B. Grefenstette and M. Brightman (Caltech) for the NuSTAR Team
NuSTAR performed follow-up observations of GRB 231115A / magnetar giant flare (Burns GCN Circular 35038) in the direction of M82 (D'Avanzo et al. GCN Circ. 35036; Mereghetti et al. GCN Circ. 35037). The NuSTAR observation was centered on the potential optical counterpart location from GROWTH India (Kumar et al. GCN Circ 35041, Kumar et al., GCN Circ 35055).
NuSTAR began observing at 2023-11-15T22:21:09, only ~four hours after the ToO trigger was approved. We report on the first ~40-ks of data.
M82 has a number of bright point sources as well as extended emission that is unresolved by the NuSTAR PSF (see, e.g., Brightman et al 2020 ApJ 889 71, DOI:10.3847/1538-4357/ab629a). The NuSTR observation does not reveal any significant point sources outside of the central ~1-arcmin region of M82. No significant emission from the location of optical transient AT2023xvj at RA = 09:56:00.2, Dec = 69:40:29.2 (RA=149.000,Dec=+69.675) is seen, though this overlaps with the wings of the NuSTAR PSF from the central emission from M82 as well as extended emission in the galaxy. These observations are on-going.
The NuSTAR SINGS pipeline did not trigger on the GRB 231115A transient. We performed an off-line analysis of the NuSTAR shield data and the count rates from the X-ray detectors and do not see the transient in either set of data. This is unsurprising, as the NuSTAR CsI shield data are only stored at 1-Hz and short signals such as from this GRB are difficult to identify. The source was ~80 degrees from the Earth horizon and ~35-deg from the instrument boresight, which may also have been an unfavorable geometry for detecting the source in the CdZnTe detectors.
GCN Circular 35065
Subject
GRB 231115A: Swift/BAT-GUANO detection of a short burst
Date
2023-11-16T17:46:12Z (2 years ago)
From
Samuele Ronchini at PSU <sjs8171@psu.edu>
Via
Web form
Samuele Ronchini (PSU), Aaron Tohuvavohu (U Toronto), James DeLaunay (PSU), Gayathri Raman (PSU), Tyler Parsotan (NASA GSFC), Jamie A. Kennea (PSU) report:
Swift/BAT did not localize GRB 231115A onboard (T0: 2023-11-15T15:36:21.2 UTC, Fermi GCN 35035, Integral GCN 35037, Glowbug GCN 35045, Insight-HXMT/HE GCN 35060, Konus-Wind GCN 35062).
The Fermi and Integral notices, distributed in near real-time, triggered the Swift Mission Operations Center operated Gamma-ray Urgent Archiver for Novel Opportunities (GUANO; Tohuvavohu et al. 2020, ApJ, 900, 1).
Upon trigger by this notice, GUANO sent a command to the Swift Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) to save 200 seconds of BAT event-mode data from [-50,+150] seconds around the time of the burst. All the requested event mode data was delivered to the ground.
The BAT likelihood search, NITRATES (DeLaunay + Tohuvavohu 2022, ApJ, 941, 169), performed on the temporal window [T0-20 s, T0+20 s], detects the burst with a sqrt(TS) of 20.26 in a 0.128 s analysis time bin, starting at T0.
NNITRATES results, independently, are ambiguous with respect to whether this burst originates from in or outside the BAT coded FOV, with a DeltaLLHOut of 8.9.
The Integral localization, coincident with M82, is consistent with being outside the BAT coded FOV.
The very short duration and the large E_peak (best fit value from the spectral template of 720 keV) are consistent with the Magnetar Giant Flare scenario (GCN 35044, GCN 35059).
See Section 9.1 and Figures 10 and 17 in the NITRATES paper for brief descriptions and interpretation of sqrt(TS), DeltaLLHPeak, and DeltaLLHOut.
GUANO is a fully autonomous, extremely low latency, spacecraft commanding pipeline designed for targeted recovery of BAT event mode data around the times of compelling astrophysical events to enable more sensitive GRB searches.
A live reporting of Swift/BAT event data recovered by GUANO can be found at: https://www.swift.psu.edu/guano/
GCN Circular 35064
Subject
GRB 231115A: Swift-XRT and Swift-UVOT observations
Date
2023-11-16T14:39:58Z (2 years ago)
From
Phil Evans at U of Leicester <pae9@star.le.ac.uk>
Via
email
J.P. Osborne (U. Leicester), B. Sbarufatti (INAF-OAB), A. D'Ai
(INAF-IASFPA), A. Melandri (INAF-OAR), J. D. Gropp (PSU), S. Dichiara
(PSU), J.A. Kennea (PSU), K.L. Page (U. Leicester), A.P. Beardmore (U.
Leicester) and P.A. Evans (U. Leicester) and S. R. Oates (Lancaster U.)
report on behalf of the Swift-XRT and the Swift-UVOT teams:
Swift-XRT has performed follow-up observations of the INTEGRAL-detected
burst GRB 231115A, which is likely not a GRB, but it is likely a MGF
(Burns GCN Circular 35038) and whose position is consistent with M82
galaxy (D'Avanzo et al. GCN Circ. 35036; Mereghetti et al. GCN Circ.
35037), collecting 4.4 ks of Photon Counting (PC) mode data between
T0+9.0 ks and T0+39.2 ks.
No uncatalogued X-ray sources have been detected consistent with being
within 303 arcsec of the INTEGRAL position. The 3-sigma upper limit in
the field ranges from ~0.002 to ~0.003 ct s^-1, corresponding to a
0.3-10 keV observed flux of 8.2e-14 to 1.2e-13 erg cm^-2 s^-1 (assuming
a typical GRB spectrum).
Six previously-catalogued X-ray sources have been detected consistent
with being within 303 arcsec of the INTEGRAL position, however their
status as catalogued objects makes them unlikely to be the X-ray
counterpart.
An uncatalogued object was detected, however this was too far from the
GRB position to be the X-ray counterpart.
We note that the diffuse X-ray emission from the M82 galaxy affects a
significant fraction of the INTEGRAL error circle. This likely reduces
the sensitivity for source detection.
The results of the XRT-team automatic analysis of the XRT observations,
including a position specific upper limit calculator, are available at
https://www.swift.ac.uk/ToO_GRBs/00021625.
No optical counterpart consistent with the INTEGRAL position
(Mereghetti et al., GCN Circ. 35037) is detected in the initial UVOT
exposures.
Preliminary 3-sigma upper limits using the UVOT photometric system
(Breeveld et al. 2011, AIP Conf. Proc. 1358, 373) are:
Filter T_start(s) T_stop(s) Exp(s) Mag
w1 9253
39224 4283 >17.4
The magnitude in the table is not corrected for the Galactic extinction
due to the reddening of E(B-V) = 0.155 in the direction of the burst
(Schlegel et al. 1998).
This circular is an official product of the Swift team.
GCN Circular 35062
Subject
Konus-Wind detection of GRB 231115A (a probable Magnetar Giant Flare from M82)
Date
2023-11-16T12:43:51Z (2 years ago)
From
Dmitry Frederiks at Ioffe Institute <fred@mail.ioffe.ru>
Via
legacy email
D. Frederiks, D. Svinkin, A.Lysenko, A. Ridnaia,
Yu. Temiraev, A. Tsvetkova, M. Ulanov, and T. Cline,
on behalf of the Konus-Wind team, report:
The short duration, hard spectrum GRB 231115A
(Fermi GBM detection: Fermi GBM team GCN 35035, Dalessi et al. GCN 35044;
INTEGRAL (IBAS) detection: Mereghetti et al., GCN 35037;
Glowbug detection: Cheung et al., GCN 35045)
triggered Konus-Wind (KW) at T0= 56183.509 s UT (15:36:23.509).
The burst light curve shows a single FRED-like pulse,
which starts, at ~T0-0.028 s with the fast (<4 ms) rise of
the emission intensity, which peaks at ~T0-0.016 s
and has a total duration of ~66 ms.
The Konus-Wind light curve of this GRB is available at
http://www.ioffe.ru/LEA/GRBs/GRB231115_T56183/
As observed by Konus-Wind, the burst had
a fluence of (7.3 ± 0.1)x10^-7 erg/cm^2 and
a 16-ms peak energy flux, measured from T0 - 0.018 s,
of (2.2 ± 0.45)x10^-5 erg/cm^2/s (both in the 20 keV - 10 MeV energy range).
The time-integrated spectrum (measured from T0-0.028 s to T0+0.036 s)
is best fit in the 20 keV - 1.5 MeV range by a power law with exponential
cutoff (CPL) model: dN/dE ~ (E^alpha)*exp(-E*(2+alpha)/Ep)
with alpha = 0.69(-0.54,+0.96) and Ep = 495(-77,+118) keV.
A blackbody (BB) spectral model fits the spectrum equally well,
with the BB temperature kT = 114(-10,+9) keV.
Assuming the likely GRB 231115A association with the nearby
M82 galaxy at ~3.5 Mpc (D’Avanzo et al., GCN 35036;
Mereghetti et al., GCN 35037; Burns GCN 35038),
we estimate the burst isotropic energy Eiso to ~1.1x10^45 erg and
the 16-ms peak luminosity Liso to ~3.2x10^46 erg/s.
These values are in the range the of the energetics of initial pulses
of magnetar giant flares (MGFs), which, assuming the short rise time
and the hard energy spectrum of the burst, supports its MGF origin.
At 3.5 Mpc, the characteristic radius of the emission region,
estimated from the KW blackbody spectral fit, is R~30 km,
the same order of magnitude as the radius of a neutron star or its magnetosphere.
All the quoted errors are estimated at the 68% confidence level.
All the presented results are preliminary.
GCN Circular 35061
Subject
GRB 231115A: AGILE/MCAL upper limits
Date
2023-11-16T11:53:27Z (2 years ago)
From
Francesco Verrecchia at SSDC,INAF-OAR <francesco.verrecchia@ssdc.asi.it>
Via
email
C. Pittori, F. Verrecchia (SSDC, and INAF/OAR), M. Tavani (INAF/IAPS,
and Univ. Roma Tor Vergata), C. Casentini, L. Foffano (INAF/IAPS),
G. Piano (INAF/IAPS), A. Ursi (ASI and INAF/IAPS), L. Baroncelli,
A. Bulgarelli, A. Ciabattoni, A. Di Piano, V. Fioretti, G. Panebianco,
N. Parmiggiani (INAF/OAS-Bologna), M. Pilia (INAF/OA-Cagliari),
P.W. Cattaneo (INFN Pavia), F. Cutrona (Univ. Milano Bicocca),
F. Longo (Univ. Trieste, and INFN Trieste), report on behalf
of the AGILE Team:
AGILE observed the short GRB 231115A first reported by Fermi GBM at
T0 = 15:36:21 UT on 15 Nov 2023 (GCN #35035) and significantly localized
by INTEGRAL in M82 (GCN #35036, #35037, #35038), suggesting a possible
magnetar giant flare origin (also GCN #35044).
The GRB location was fully accessible to the AGILE MCAL at about 70
degrees off-axis, but no trigger occured around +/- 50 sec from T0.
The three-sigma upper limit (UL) obtained for a 1 s integration time
at the GRB position is 1.3E-06 erg cm^-2 (assuming as spectral model a
single power law with photon index 1.5).
The AGILE-MCAL detector is a CsI detector with a 4 pi FoV, sensitive
in the energy range 0.4-100 MeV. Additional analysis of AGILE data
is in progress.
GCN Circular 35060
Subject
GRB 231115A: Insight-HXMT/HE detection
Date
2023-11-16T11:03:52Z (2 years ago)
From
Kai Kai <wcxuemail@gmail.com>
Via
Web form
W. C. Xue, S. L. Xiong, X. B. Li and C. K. Li
report on behalf of the Insight-HXMT team:
At 2023-11-15T15:36:21.200 (T0), Insight-HXMT/HE detected
GRB 231115A (trigger ID: HEB231115650) in a routine search of the data,
which was also observed by Fermi/GBM (Fermi GBM Team, GCN 35035 & 35044),
INTEGRAL (P. D'Avanzo et al., GCN 35036, S. Mereghetti et al. GCN 35037)
and Glowbug (C. C. Cheung et al., GCN 35045). This burst is probably a
giant flare from a magnetar in the nearby galaxy M82.
The Insight-HXMT/HE light curve mainly consists of single
pulse with a duration (T90) of 0.08 s measured from T0-0.01 s.
The 1-ms peak rate, measured from T0-0.01 s, is 16611 cnts/sec.
The total counts from this burst is 210 counts.
URL_LC: https://twikinew.ihep.ac.cn/pubhxmt/HXMT/GRBList/HEB231115650_lc.jpg
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
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 35059
Subject
GRB 231115A: GBM/Fermi Observations of a probable Giant Flare of Magnetar
Date
2023-11-16T09:52:35Z (2 years ago)
From
Alexei Pozanenko at IKI, Moscow <apozanen@iki.rssi.ru>
Via
legacy email
P. Minaev (IKI), A. Pozanenko (IKI) report on behalf of GRB IKI FuN:
We analyzed GRB 231115A, detected till now by GBM/Fermi (GCN 35035, GCN 35044) and INTEGRAL (GCN 35037), Glowbug (GCN 35045), using publicly available data of GBM/Fermi. The light curve of the burst is FRED-like with duration of T_90 = 0.06 +/- 0.01 s in (7, 850) keV energy range. The spectral analysis in a time interval of (-0.05, 0.05) s since GBM trigger, the best fit is obtained for CPL model with following parameters: E_p = 613 (- 60, +74) keV, alpha = 0.33 +/- 0.21. The fluence of F = (7.2 +/- 0.5)E-7 erg/cm**2 is obtained in 10 - 1000 keV energy band, Eiso = (1.24 +/- 0.14)E45 erg in (1, 10000) keV energy range for D_L = 3.5 Mpc of M82. Using Ep,i – Eiso correlation and T_90,i - EH diagram [1,2] we classify the burst as the SGR giant flare. Taking into account the non-detection of gravitational waves with LIGO/Virgo/KAGRA (LIGO Scientific Collaboration, Virgo Collaboration, KAGRA Collaboration, GCN 35049) we can suggest the GRB 231115A as the giant flash of a new SG!
R in M82 galaxy.
Ep,i – Eiso correlation can be found at http://grb.rssi.ru/GRB231115A/GRB231115A_Ep-Eiso.png
T_90,i - EH diagram can be found at http://grb.rssi.ru/GRB231115A/GRB231115A_EHD.png
[1] - Minaev et al., MNRAS, 492, 1919, 2020
[2] - Minaev et al., Astronomy Letters, 46, 9, 573, 2020
GCN Circular 35057
Subject
GRB 231115A : MITSuME Akeno and Okayama optical upper limits
Date
2023-11-16T08:39:17Z (2 years ago)
From
hayatsu@hp.phys.titech.ac.jp
Via
Web form
S. Hayatsu, N. Higuchi, I. Takahashi, M. Sasada (Tokyo Tech), K. L. Murata (Kyoto U),
M. Niwano, S. Sato, H. Seki, H. Takei, Y. Yatsu and N. Kawai (Tokyo Tech) report on behalf of the MITSuME collaboration:
We observed a field of GRB 231115A ( Fermi GBM Team GCN Circular #35035) with optical three-color (g', Rc, and Ic) CCD cameras attached to the MITSuME 50 cm telescopes Akeno and Okayama.
The observation started at 2023-11-15 17:17:29 UT (6068 seconds after the Fermi/GBM trigger). We stacked the images with good conditions. We did not detect any obvious point sources at the position reported by Kumar et al. GCN Circular #35041. We obtained the 5-sigma limits of the stacked images as follows.
T0+[sec] | MID-UT | T-EXP[sec] | 5-sigma limits
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# MITSuME Akeno
6482 | 2023-11-15 17:24:23 | 600.0 | g'>19.6, Rc>19.5, Ic>19.0
7527 | 2023-11-15 17:41:48 | 1200.0 | g'>20.0, Rc>19.8, Ic>19.3
9612 | 2023-11-15 18:16:33 | 2400.0 | g'>20.4, Rc>20.2, Ic>19.7
# MITSuME Okayama
12526 | 2023-11-15 19:05:07 | 7380.0 | g'>19.1, Rc>19.9, Ic>19.2
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T0+ : Elapsed time after the burst
T-EXP: Total Exposure time
We used the PS1 catalog for flux calibration. The catalog magnitudes in PS1 g, r and i bands were converted to our g', Rc and Ic band magnitudes following Tonry et al. (2012), Table 6. The magnitudes are expressed in the AB system. The images were processed in real-time through the MITSuME GPU reduction pipeline (Niwano et al. 2021, PASJ, Vol.73, Issue 1, Pages 4-24; https://github.com/MNiwano/Eclaire).
GCN Circular 35056
Subject
GRB 231115A: Gaoyazi/GOT follow-up and archival observations
Date
2023-11-16T06:31:54Z (2 years ago)
From
Dong Xu at NAOC/CAS <dxu@nao.cas.cn>
Via
email
S.Q. Jiang, X. Liu, S.Y. Fu, J. An, Z.P. Zhu, T.H. Lu, D. Xu (NAOC), L.F. Huo, S.W. Luo, M.M. Yang, Z. K. Feng (GYZO) report:
We observed the field of GRB 231115A, a short GRB detected by the Fermi GBM (Fermi GBM Team, GCN 35035), INTEGRAL (Mereghetti et al., GCN 35037), and Glowbug (Cheung et al., GCN 35045), using the GOT-0.5m telescope located at Gaoyazi, Xinjiang, China. Observations started at 16:36:59 UT on 2023-11-15, i.e., 1.01 hr after the Fermi/GBM trigger, and we obtained 40x60 s frames in the Sloan r-filter and 40x90 s frames in the Sloan z-filter.
No credible optical transient is detected in our stacked images within and beside the error region of the INTEGRAL by the means of catalogue cross-match and image subtraction, down to 3-sigma limiting magnitudes of r>20.1 @ 1.38 hr and z>18.0 @ 2.86 hr post-burst, calibrated with nearby PanSTARRS stars. The magnitude is not corrected for Galactic extinction.
The field is also covered by the GW survey program at the GOT. The latest template was taken on 2023-10-05 and it gives upper limit down to r>18.8 within the INTEGRAL/IBAS error region.
GCN Circular 35055
Subject
GRB 231115A / AT2023xvj: Updated GIT analysis
Date
2023-11-16T06:07:34Z (2 years ago)
From
Varun Bhalerao at IIT Bombay <varunb@iitb.ac.in>
Via
Web form
R. Kumar (IIT Bombay), V. Karambelkar (Caltech), V. Swain, V. Bhalerao, A. Salgundi, Y. Wagh (IIT Bombay), G. C. Anupama, S. Barway (IIA), R. Norboo (IAO), T. Ahumada, M. M. Kasliwal (Caltech) report on behalf of a larger collaboration
We undertook refined analysis of GIT231115AA / AT2023xvj (Kumar et al, GCN 35041). The source is detected in 25 individual r-band images obtained by GIT (https://sites.google.com/view/growthindia/results/at2023xvj), as well as in a stacked image.
We investigated the reference images from PanSTARRS used for image subtraction and find a small, fuzzy, "negative" artifact at the location of the source (see link above), which may boost the counts at the source location. This had been considered in the original report, and excluded due to three reasons: first, the measured source flux is varying despite fixed exposure times, which makes it unlikely that they are all caused due to the same artifact. Second, there are similar artifacts at other locations in the reference images which do not create such bright spurious sources. Third, the source shows a PSF-like profile while the reference image artifact does not.
Other groups have reported non-detections which are broadly consistent with our detection: Balanutsa et al, (GCN 35046) report an upper limit of 21.3 which is comparable to our image sensitivity of 21.45 (5-sigma). However, the candidate is in a high background region which will result in shallower upper limits. Upper limits reported by Iskandar et al (GCN 35051 - 18.9 mag), and Chen et al (GCN 35052 - 19.2 mag) are consistent with our measurement.
Given the complex nature of background in the M82 field and the potential artifact, we undertook manual image subtraction using SDSS images as a reference. In this scenario, the subtraction is noisier, and we do not detect any source at the location of GIT231115AA / AT2023xvj, to a limiting magnitude of 19.3 (5-sigma).
Given this analysis, we caution observers that AT2023xvj be treated as a candidate, not a secure counterpart.
GCN Circular 35054
Subject
GRB 231115A: archival Chandra X-ray observations
Date
2023-11-16T05:14:29Z (2 years ago)
From
Albert Kong at NTHU <akhkong@gmail.com>
Via
Web form
A.K.H. Kong (NTHU), K.-L. Li (NCKU) report:
Following the discovery of GRB 231115A (GCN 35035) in the direction of M82 and its optical counterpart candidate AT 2023xvj (GCN 35041), we searched for X-ray emission from the progenitor with the Chandra X-ray Observatory. Chandra observed M82 with the ACIS detector 32 times between 2000 and 2016, with a total exposure time of about 561 ks. We combined all the observations and no source is visible at the position of the optical transient. We derive a 3-sigma luminosity limit of 2.3e37 erg/s (0.3-10 keV; D=3.5 Mpc) by assuming an absorbed power-law model with a photon index of 2.
GCN Circular 35053
Subject
GRB 231115A: Upper limits from a neutrino search with IceCube
Date
2023-11-16T02:50:50Z (2 years ago)
From
Sam Hori at IceCube/U Wisc-Madison <sahori@wisc.edu>
Via
legacy email
The IceCube Collaboration (http://icecube.wisc.edu/) reports:
IceCube has performed a search for track-like muon neutrino events arriving from the direction of GRB 231115A (GCN Circ. 35035<https://gcn.nasa.gov/circulars/35035> (Fermi-GBM), INTEGRAL GCN Notice 10427<https://gcn.gsfc.nasa.gov/other/10427.integral>), a likely magnetar giant flare in M82 (D'Avanzo et al., GCN Circ. 35036<https://gcn.nasa.gov/circulars/35036