GRB 240529A
GCN Circular 37612
Subject
GRB 240529A: FRAM-ORM early optical afterglow observations reveal plateau and rebrightening
Date
2024-09-26T15:18:39Z (a year ago)
From
Martin Jelinek at Astro.Inst-AVCR,Ondrejov <martin.jelinek@asu.cas.cz>
Via
legacy email
Martin Jelinek, Alzbeta Malenakova, Jan Strobl (ASU CAS Ondrejov, CZ), Sergey Karpov, Martin Masek, Petr Janecek, Jakub Jurysek, Jan Ebr, Ronan Cunniffe, Petr Travnicek and Michael Prouza (Institute of Physics, Prague, CZ)
report:
The 25cm robotic telescope FRAM-ORM at La Palma (Spain) responded automatically to the Swift alert of GRB 240529A (Eyles-Ferris et al., GCN 36556; Osborne et al., GCN 36557; Dichiara et al., GCN 36564; Markwardt et al., GCN 36566). We obtained a series of unfiltered 20s and 60s exposures starting at 02:59:07.8 UT, (37s post-trigger) and covering two hours of the afterglow evolution.
Due to an ongoing focusing run at the time of the alert, initial frames were out of focus. Nevertheless, the optical afterglow was clearly detected in all focused and defocused images, allowing for a comprehensive early-time light curve from an early plateau through initial decay to the start of a substantial rebrightening.
Combining our data with published measurements (Dutton et al., GCN 36568; Mo et al., GCN 36569), we reconstruct the overall light curve behavior:
a) Initial plateau: The afterglow maintained a nearly constant brightness, declining marginally from r~15.2 to 15.5 during the first 2ks post-trigger.
b) Gradual decay: The initial plateau gradually transitioned to a decay with the decay index consistent with the later decay.
c) Rebrightening: The trend reverses suddenly at ~4.2ks and the afterglow nearly reaches its initial brightness at a second peak of r~15.8 at t~10ks.
d) Final decay: after 10ks, the afterglow decays with a power-law index alpha ~ 1.85, consistent with multiple team reports (Kumar et al., GCN 36559; Fu et al., GCN 36561; Shilling et al., GCN 36562; Perez-Garcia et al., GCN 36563; Dutton et al., GCN 36568; Mo et al., GCN 36569)
GCN Circular 36947
Subject
GRB240529A: VIRT optical transient detection
Date
2024-07-27T17:41:52Z (a year ago)
From
Priya Gokuldass at ERAU <gokuldap@my.erau.edu>
Via
Web form
K. Smith (UVI), P. Gokuldass (ERAU), N. Orange (OrangeWave Innovative Science, LLC), D. Morris (NASA), T. Lombardi (Eckerd College), K. Noonan (UVI), D. Smith (UVI), R. Querrard (UVI) report:
We observed the field of GRB240529A (Eyles-Ferris et al., GCN 36556; Joshi et al., GCN 36560; Tan et al., GCN 36578; Kozyrev et al., GCN 36583; Svinkin et al., GCN 36584) with the 0.5m Virgin Islands Robotic Telescope (VIRT) at the University of the Virgin Islands' Etelman Observatory on 2024-05-30 starting at 7:10:12 UT (with Tmid as T+ 28.19 hrs). We performed a series of exposures in R filter with a total exposure of 2630s. The weather conditions were partly cloudy during the hours of observation with an average airmass of ~1.36.
We detect the optical transient reported by others (Kumar et al. GCN 36559; Fu et al. GCN 36561; Shilling et al. GCN 36562; Perez-Garcia et al. GCN 36563; Dutton et al. GCN 36568; Mo et al. GCN 36569; Odeh et al. GCNs 36573, 36592; de Ugarte Postigo et al. GCN 36574; Adami et al. GCN 36575; Mohan et al. GCN 36576; Vinko et al. GCN 36577; Lim et al. GCN 36579; Moskvitin et al. GCNs 36582, 36597, 36601 ; Pankov et al. GCN 36585; Ror et al., GCN 36589; Hu et al. GCN 36599; Lipunov et al. GCN 36603). Our data are consistent with the slow decay suggested through earlier reports (Odeh et al. GCN 36573, 36592; Lim et al. GCN 36579; Ror et al. GCN 36589; Moskvitin et al. GCNs 36582, 36597, 36601; Rossi et al. GCN 36655). We report the following magnitude:
T_mid. ||Exposure ||Filter ||Magnitude
T+ 28.19 hrs ||2630s ||R ||19.4 +/- 0.1
The limit is estimated from comparison to nearby PANSTAARS and is not corrected for Galactic extinction. The VIRT is still in the commissioning phase.
We acknowledge financial support from NASA MUREP MIRO awad 80NSSC21M001, NASA EPSCoR award 80NNSC22M0063, and NSF PAARE award 2319415. We also acknowledge the use of STDWeb interface to verify our result.
GCN Circular 36734
Subject
GRB 240529A: JinShan optical observations
Date
2024-06-22T14:23:13Z (a year ago)
From
Dong Xu at NAOC/CAS <dxu@nao.cas.cn>
Via
Web form
J. An, X. Liu, Z.P. Zhu, S.Q. Jiang, S.Y. Fu, T.H. Lu, D. Xu (NAOC), J.Z. Liu (XAO) report on behalf of a large collaboration:
We observed the field of GRB 240529A by Swift (Eyles-Ferris et al. GCN 36556) using the 50cm-B, 50cm-C, 100cm-C telescopes (50B,50C,100C) of the JinShan project located at Altay, Xinjiang, China.
Observations were carried out between 16:14:18 UT and 17:55:39 UT on 2024-05-29 in the g, r, i, and z filters. The previously reported optical afterglow, e.g., by Swift/UVOT (Eyles-Ferris et al. GCN 36556; Shilling et al., GCN 36562) was clearly detected in our images.
Photometric results are reported as follows
T-T0(d) | Filter | Mag | MagErr
---------------------------------
0.5639 | g | 19.76 | 0.18
0.5691 | r | 18.56 | 0.06
0.5639 | i | 17.80 | 0.05
0.6037 | z | 17.65 | 0.06
calibrated with nearby PanSTARRS stars and not corrected for Galactic extinction.
Furthers observations have also been done by JinShan.
We acknowledge the excellent support from S.W Luo, M.M. Yang, Z. K. Feng, and L.F. Huo for enabling these observations.
GCN Circular 36656
Subject
GRB240529A: 3.6m TNG NIR detection 8d after the burst
Date
2024-06-10T17:25:40Z (a year ago)
From
Youdong HU at INAF-OAB <huyoudong072@hotmail.com>
Via
Web form
Y.-D. Hu, P. D'Avanzo, M. Ferro, R. Brivio, S. Covino, D. Fugazza, S. Campana (INAF-OAB), A. Rossi (INAF-OAS), D. B. Malesani (DAWN/NBI & Radboud Univ.), A. Melandri (INAF-OAR), L. Di Fabrizio, H. Stoev (INAF-TNG) on behalf of the CIBO collaboration report:
We observed the field of the GRB240529A detected by the Swift (Eyles-Ferris et al., GCNC 36556), AstroSat (Joshi et al., GCNC 36560), Insight-HXMT (Tan et al., GCNC 36578), IPN (Kozyrev et al., GCNC 36583) and Konus-Wind (Svinkin et al., GCNC 36584) with the Italian 3.6m TNG telescope equipped with the near-infrared camera NICS to follow up its afterglow. A series of images were obtained with the J filter starting on 2024-06-06 04:42:44 UT (i.e. 8.1 days post T0). The afterglow (Kumar et al. GCNC 36559, Fu et al. GCNC 36561, Shilling et al. GCNC 36562, Perez-Garcia et al., GCNC 36563, Dutton et al., GCNC 36568, Mo et al., GCNC 36569, Odeh et al. GCNC 36573, GCNC 36592, de Ugarte Postigo et al., GCNC 36574, Adami et al., GCNC 36575, Mohan et al., GCNC 36576, Vinko et al., GCNC 36577, Gu et al., GCNC 36579, Moskvitin et al., GCNC 36582, GCNC 36594, GCNC 36597, GCNC 36601, GCNC 36613, Pankov et al., GCNC 36585, Ror et al., GCNC 36589, Hu et al., GCNC 36599, Lipunov et al., GCNC 36603, Rhodes et al., GCNC 36636, Niwano et al., GCNC 36654, Rossi et al., GCNC 36655) is faintly detected in the co-added image with a preliminary result of J(Vega)~20.4 mag (calibrated against the 2MASS catalogue).
GCN Circular 36655
Subject
GRB 240529A: LBT optical detection and late temporal decay
Date
2024-06-10T13:22:57Z (a year ago)
From
Andrea Rossi at INAF <andrea.rossi@inaf.it>
Via
Web form
A. Rossi, E. Maiorano (INAF-OAS), A. Melandri (INAF-OAR), D. B. Malesani (DAWN/NBI and Radboud), L. Izzo (INAF-OACn & DARK/NBI) and M . De Pasquale (Univ. of Messina) report on behalf of the CIBO collaboration:
We observed the field of GRB 240529A (Eyles-Ferris et al., GCN 36556; Joshi et al., GCN 36560; Tan et al., GCN 36578; Kozyrev et al., GCN 36583 et al. GCN 36583; Svinkin et al., GCN 36584) with the LBC camera mounted on LBT (Mt Graham, AZ, USA) in u'g'r'i'z' bands approximately at midtime 9:55 UT on 2024-06-05 and 7.3 days after the burst trigger.
The optical transient (Kumar et al. GCN 36559; Fu et al. GCN 36561; Shilling et al. GCN 36562; Perez-Garcia et al. GCN 36563; Dutton et al. GCN 36568; Mo et al. GCN 36569; Odeh et al. GCNs 36573, 36592; de Ugarte Postigo et al. GCN 36574; Adami et al. GCN 36575; Mohan et al. GCN 36576; Vinko et al. GCN 36577; Lim et al. GCN 36579; Moskvitin et al. GCNs 36582, 36597, 36601 ; Pankov et al. GCN 36585; Ror et al., 36589; Hu et al. GCN 36599; Lipunov et al. GCN 36603) is well detected in r’i’z’ bands. The good seeing (0.8") allows us to detect the afterglow and separate it from a brighter star which is only 1 arcsec away and visible also in PanSTARRS archival images. Using PSF photometry, we measure a preliminary AB magnitude of r'=23.9+-0.1, calibrated against PanSTARRS field stars, and not corrected for the foreground Galactic extinction.
This detection together with the early photometry reported in the GCNs (selected between 5 and 30 hours after the trigger to be less contaminated by the near-by bright-star) are well fitted by a power-law decay with index -1.9, in agreement with the Swift/XRT late-time decay behavior.
We acknowledge the excellent support from the LBTO and LBT-INAF staff, particularly J. Rupert, S. Allanson, F. Cusano, E. Marini, D. Paris, and E. O. Kishka in obtaining these observations.
GCN Circular 36654
Subject
GRB 240529A : MITSuME Akeno optical afterglow detection
Date
2024-06-10T11:17:09Z (a year ago)
From
Masafumi Niwano at Tokyo Institute of Technology <niwano@hp.phys.titech.ac.jp>
Via
Web form
M. Niwano, I. Takahashi, M. Sasada, N. Higuchi, S. Hayatsu, H. Seki, S. Joshima, Y. Kubo, H. Hagio, Y. Yatsu and N. Kawai (Tokyo Tech) report on behalf of the MITSuME collaboration:
We observed the field of GRB 240529A (Eyles-Ferris et al. GCN 36556) with the optical three color (g', Rc, and Ic) CCD cameras attached to the MITSuME 50 cm telescope Akeno.
The observation with a series of 60 sec exposures started at 2024-05-29 15:11:22 UT (12.2 hrs after the Swift trigger). We stacked the images in good conditions. Then we detected point source in the Ic-band image at the Swift/UVOT position (Eyles-Ferris et al. GCN 36556). Here we report the Ic-band photometry on the image subtracted with a reference image taken at 2024-06-04 (5 days after the trigger), and the 5-sigma upper-limits as follows.
T0+[hrs] | MID-UT | T-EXP[sec] | magnitudes of aperture photometry
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
12.3 | 2024-05-29 16:10:25 | 1080 | g’>18.1, Rc>17.9, Ic=17.5+/-0.2
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T0+ : Elapsed time after the trigger
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; https://github.com/MNiwano/Eclaire).
GCN Circular 36642
Subject
GRB 240529A: NOEMA detection
Date
2024-06-07T21:34:41Z (a year ago)
From
Antonio de Ugarte Postigo at OCA <deugarte@oca.eu>
Via
email
A. de Ugarte Postigo (CNRS/OCA & LAM), J.M. Winters (IRAM), M. Bremer (IRAM), C. C. Thoene (ASU-CAS), J. F. Agui Fernandez (CAHA), S. Antier (OCA), S. Basa (LAM), M. Michalowski (AOI-AMU), D. A. Perley (LJMU), J.-G. Ducoin (CPPM) report:
We observed the afterglow of GRB 240529A (Eyles-Ferris et al. GCN 36556, ) with the NOEMA interferometer, located at Plateau de Bure (France). The observation was performed on the 3rd June 2024 at around 11:00 UT, 5.3 days after the burst onset at the 3 mm band.
The afterglow is detected at a flux density of ~2 mJy, indicating that the peak emission is still at higher frequencies than the 15 GHz detection by AMI-LA (Rhodes et al. GCN 36636).
Based on observations carried out under project number W23DI with the IRAM NOEMA Interferometer. IRAM is supported by INSU/CNRS (France), MPG (Germany) and IGN (Spain).
GCN Circular 36636
Subject
GRB 240529A: radio detection with AMI-LA
Date
2024-06-07T11:47:28Z (a year ago)
From
Lauren Rhodes at Oxford <lauren.rhodes@physics.ox.ac.uk>
Via
Web form
Lauren Rhodes, Rob Fender (Oxford), Dave Green, Dave Titterington (Cambridge) report:
We observed the field of GRB 240529A (GCN 36556) with the Arcminute Microkelvin Imager - Large Array (AMI-LA) at 15.5 GHz beginning at UT 04:11:39 on 02-June-2024 for a total of 4 hours. The flux standard 3c286 was used to calibrate the bandpass response and flux scale of the AMI-LA and J2202+4216 was used as an interleaved complex gain calibrator.
We detected an unresolved radio source at the position of the afterglow candidate (also reported in GCN 36556) with a peak flux density of ~1mJy/beam. The rms noise in the field is about 40uJy/beam.
More observations are ongoing.
We thank the staff at the Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory for carrying out these observations and operating the AMI-LA.
GCN Circular 36613
Subject
GRB 240529A: SAO RAS optical observations
Date
2024-06-04T15:21:45Z (a year ago)
From
Moskvitin Alexander at SAO RAS <mosk@sao.ru>
Via
legacy email
A. S. Moskvitin, O. A. Maslennikova, O. I. Spiridonova (SAO RAS),
report on behalf of the GRB follow-up team.
We observed the field of the GRB 240529A (Eyles-Ferris et al.
GCN 36556; Osborne et al. GCN 36557; Joshi et al. GCN 36560;
Dichiara et al. GCN 36564; Markwardt et al. GCN 36566; Tan et al.
GCN 36578; Kozyrev et al. GCN 36583; Svinkin et al. GCN 36584)
with the SAO RAS 1m telescope Zeiss-1000 equipped with CCD-photometer.
We obtained 15 x 200 sec frames in the Rc band on June 3, 23:17:01 --
June 4, 00:16:47 UT (t_mid - T0 = 5.8669 days).
The OT (Kumar et al. GCN 36559; Fu et al. GCN 36561; Shilling et al.
GCN 36562; Perez-Garcia et al. GCN 36563; Dutton et al. GCN 36568;
Mo et al. GCN 36569; Odeh et al. GCNs 36573, 36592;
de Ugarte Postigo et al. GCN 36574; Adami et al. GCN 36575;
Mohan et al. GCN 36576; Vinko et al. GCN 36577; Lim et al. GCN 36579;
Moskvitin et al. GCNs 36582, 36597; 36601; Pankov et al. GCN 36585;
Ror et al., 36589; Hu et al. GCN 36599; Lipunov et al., GCN 36603)
is clearly detected in the stacked frame with the brightness of
R = 20.96 +/- 0.09.
The magnitudes were calibrated using R2 magnitudes of nearby USNO-B1.0
stars.
GCN Circular 36603
Subject
GRB 240529A: MASTER prompt OT detection
Date
2024-06-03T05:40:18Z (a year ago)
From
Vladimir Lipunov at Moscow State U/Krylov Obs <lipunov@xray.sai.msu.ru>
Via
legacy email
V.Lipunov (MSU), D.Buckley (SAAO),
K.Zhirkov, G.Antipov, E.Gorbovskoy, A.Kuznetsov, D.Vlasenko, P.Balanutsa,
N.Tiurina, Ya.Kechin, Yu.Tselik, D.Zimnukhov, V.Senik, A.Yudin, V.Topolev,
A.Chasovnikov,D.Cheryasov(Lomonosov MSU,SAI,PhysicsDepartment),
O.Gress, N.Budnev(ISU),
A.Sosnovskij (Crimean Astrophysical Observatory, RAS),
C.Francile. F. Podesta, R.Podesta (Observatorio Astronomico Felix AguilarOAFA),
R. Rebolo, M. Serra(The Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias),
A. Tlatov, D. Dormidontov (Kislovodsk Solar Station of the Pulkovo Observatory),
A. Gabovich, V.Yurkov (Blagoveschensk Educational StateUniversity)
MASTER Global robotic net (http://observ.pereplet.ru Lipunov etal.,2010,Advances in Astronomy,2010,30L)
started observation (Lipunov et al. GCN 36555) of Swift GRB240529A (Eyles-Ferris et al. GCN36556, Ttrigger= 02:58:31UT)
in MASTER-SAAO at 3 degrees altitude at 2024-05-29 02:59:20 by wide-field MASTER-II camera and
at 2024-05-29 02:59:16 (44s after GRB time) by very wide field MASTER-VWF camera.
The optical transient MASTER OT J222126.06+513344.6 clearly detected since
03:00:20 with m_OT~14.5 at first maximum and with possible second maximum at light curve
during prompt emission of this GRB (Swift-BAT lightcurve Markwardt,Barthelmy et al. GCN36566)
The reduction of first 40 images from MASTER-VWFC since 2024-05-29 02:59:16 with OT substraction will be continued.
Observations started at zenith distance = 87 deg. The sun altitude was -31.0deg.
The galactic latitude b = -5 deg., longitude l = 101 deg.
Real time updated cover map and OT discovered available here:
https://master.sai.msu.ru/site/master2/observ.php?id=2474976
GCN Circular 36601
Subject
GRB 240529A: continued SAO RAS optical observations
Date
2024-06-03T02:31:13Z (a year ago)
From
Moskvitin Alexander at SAO RAS <mosk@sao.ru>
Via
legacy email
A. S. Moskvitin, O. A. Maslennikova, O. I. Spiridonova (SAO RAS),
report on behalf of the GRB follow-up team.
We observed the field of the GRB 240529A (Eyles-Ferris et al.
GCN 36556; Osborne et al. GCN 36557; Joshi et al. GCN 36560;
Dichiara et al. GCN 36564; Markwardt et al. GCN 36566; Tan et al.
GCN 36578; Kozyrev et al. GCN 36583; Svinkin et al. GCN 36584)
with the SAO RAS 1m telescope Zeiss-1000 equipped with CCD-photometer.
We obtained 11 x 300 sec frames in the Rc band on June 2, 23:09:06 --
June 3, 00:12:47 UT (t_mid - T0 = 4.8628 days).
The OT (Kumar et al. GCN 36559; Fu et al. GCN 36561; Shilling et al.
GCN 36562; Perez-Garcia et al. GCN 36563; Dutton et al. GCN 36568;
Mo et al. GCN 36569; Odeh et al. GCNs 36573, 36592;
de Ugarte Postigo et al. GCN 36574; Adami et al. GCN 36575;
Mohan et al. GCN 36576; Vinko et al. GCN 36577; Lim et al. GCN 36579;
Moskvitin et al. GCNs 36582, 36597; Pankov et al. GCN 36585;
Ror et al., 36589; Hu et al. GCN 36599) is clearly detected
in the stacked frame almost with the same brightness as the day before
R = 20.72 +/- 0.09.
The magnitudes were calibrated using R2 magnitudes of nearby USNO-B1.0
stars.
GCN Circular 36599
Subject
GRB 240529A: OSN optical detection
Date
2024-06-02T20:53:59Z (a year ago)
From
Youdong HU at INAF-OAB <huyoudong072@hotmail.com>
Via
Web form
Y.-D. Hu (INAF-OAB), F. Aceituno, E. Fernandez-Garcia, A. J. Castro-Tirado, I. Perez-Garcia, S.-Y. Wu, M.D. Caballero-Garcia, R. Sanchez-Ramirez, S. Guziy (IAA-CSIC), on behalf of a larger collaboration, report:
Following the detection of GRB 240529A by Swift (Eyles-Ferris et al. GCNC 36556), we triggered the 1.5m telescope of the Observatiorio Sierra Nevada (OSN) near Granada, Spain. Observations in the RI bands began on Jun. 1 at 01:06 UT (~ 2.9 days post burst). The afterglow is clearly detected with 19.4+-0.1 mag in the I-band image (exposure 300 s) within the enhanced XRT/Swift position (Osborne et al. GCNC 36557). Our result is consistent with previous reports from GOTO (Kumar et al. GCNC 36559), NOT (Fu et al. GCNC 36561), UVOT (Shilling et al. GCNC 36562), BOOTES (Perez-Garcia et al., GCNC 36563), Skynet (Dutton et al., GCNC 36568), WINTER (Mo et al., GCNC 36569), AKO (Odeh et al. GCNC 36573), GTC (de Ugarte Postigo et al., GCNC 36574), T193/MISTRAL (Adami et al., GCNC 36575), GROWTH (Mohan et al., GCNC 36576), Konkoly (Vinko et al., GCNC 36577), MAAO (Gu et al., GCNC 36579), SAO (Moskvitin et al., GCNC 36582, GCNC 36594), Mondy (Pankov et al., GCNC 36585) and DFOT (Ror et al., GCNC 36589). Further imaging is ongoing.
We thank the staff at OSN for their excellent support.
GCN Circular 36597
Subject
GRB 240529A: further SAO RAS optical observations
Date
2024-06-02T13:30:58Z (a year ago)
From
Moskvitin Alexander at SAO RAS <mosk@sao.ru>
Via
legacy email
A. S. Moskvitin, O. I. Spiridonova, O. A. Maslennikova (SAO RAS),
report on behalf of the GRB follow-up team.
We observed the field of the GRB 240529A (Eyles-Ferris et al.
GCN 36556; Osborne et al. GCN 36557; Joshi et al. GCN 36560;
Dichiara et al. GCN 36564; Markwardt et al. GCN 36566; Tan et al.
GCN 36578) with the SAO RAS 1m telescope Zeiss-1000 equipped
with CCD-photometer. We obtained 8 x 300 sec frames in the Rc band
on June 1, 23:30:20 -- June 2, 00:16:50 UT (t_mid - T0 = 3.8716 days).
The OT (Kumar et al. GCN 36559; Fu et al. GCN 36561; Shilling et al.
GCN 36562; Perez-Garcia et al. GCN 36563; Dutton et al. GCN 36568;
Mo et al. GCN 36569; Odeh et al. GCNs 36573, 36592;
de Ugarte Postigo et al. GCN 36574; Adami et al. GCN 36575;
Mohan et al. GCN 36576; Vinko et al. GCN 36577; Lim et al. GCN 36579;
Pankov et al. GCN 36585; Ror et al., 36589) is clearly detected
in the stacked frame with the brightness of R = 20.7 +/- 0.1.
The magnitudes were calibrated using R2 magnitudes of nearby USNO-B1.0
stars.
GCN Circular 36592
Subject
GRB 240529A: AKO Optical Afterglow Follow-Up Observations
Date
2024-06-01T12:17:07Z (a year ago)
From
Mohammad Odeh at Al Khatim Observatory M44 <mshodeh@gmail.com>
Via
legacy email
Mohammad Odeh (Al-Khatim Observatory, AKO, operated by the International
Astronomical Center in Abu Dhabi, UAE), Nidhal Guessoum, Dalya Akl, Ilmah
Aabdi, and Shaikha AlShamsi (American University of Sharjah, UAE), report:
As a follow-up to our first observation performed on May 29, 2024 (GCN 36573
<https://gcn.nasa.gov/circulars/36573>), we report further observations of
the field of GRB 240529A (Eyles-Ferris et al., GCN 36556) with our 0.36m
f/7.7 robotic telescope, on May. 30, starting at 22:09 UT.
We obtained multiple 180-sec exposures in the Ic filter, where we
marginally detected the GRB afterglow.
Our detection is consistent with the results of (Kumar et al., GCN 36559;
Fu et al., GCN 36561; Shilling et al., GCN 36562; Perez-Garcia et al., GCN
36563; Dutton et al., GCN 36568; Mo et al., GCN 36569; Odeh et al. GCN
36573; Adami et al., GCN 36575; Mohan et al., GCN 36576; Vinko et al., GCN
36577; Gu et al., GCN 36579; Moskvitin et al., GCN 36582; Pankov et al.,
GCN 36585; Ror et al., GCN 36589).
The following table summarizes the results of the two nights, calculated
using the Atlas catalog as a reference:
-----------------------------------------------------------------
ObsTime (mid), Exposure, Filter, Mag, S/N, Lim. Mag.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
2024-05-29T23:08:00Z, 24 x 180s (stacked), Ic, 17.9 +/- 0.10, 16.1, 19.8
2024-05-30T23:15:55Z, 21 x 180s (stacked), Ic, 18.8 +/- 0.17, 8.0, 19.7
-----------------------------------------------------------------
The magnitudes are not corrected for galactic extinction.
For reference, cutouts of the GRB, as visible in our images for both
nights, can be found below:
Night 1
<https://astronomycenter.net/images/GRB/GRB%20240529A_Seen_20240529.png>
Night 2
<https://astronomycenter.net/images/GRB/GRB%20240529A_Seen_20240530.png>
GCN Circular 36589
Subject
GRB 240529A: 1.3m DFOT Optical observations
Date
2024-06-01T10:34:44Z (a year ago)
From
Amit Kumar Ror at ARIES <mitturor77894@gmail.com>
Via
email
Amit K. Ror, Anshika Gupta, Rishi C., Shashi B. Pandey, and Kuntal Misra
(ARIES) report:
We observed the field of GRB 240529A detected by Swift (Eyles-Ferris et
al., 2024 GCN 36556) with the 1.3m Devasthal Fast Optical Telescope (DFOT),
located at the Devasthal Observatory of the Aryabhatta Research Institute
of Observational Sciences (ARIES), India. The observations were started on
2024-05-30 at 21:11:46 UT, i.e., ~ 1.76 days after the BAT trigger. We have
taken multiple frames with an exposure time of 300 s in the R filter. A
similar set of observations was also performed on 2024-05-31 at 20:34:36
UT, i.e., ~ 2.734 days after the BAT trigger. We stacked the images after
the alignment. We clearly detected an optical afterglow in our final
stacked image within the error box of enhanced Swift-XRT and UVOT
observations (Osborne et al., 2024, GCN 36557; Shilling et al., 2024, GCN
36562). The estimated preliminary magnitude is as follows:
Date Start_UT T_start-T0 (days) Filter Exp time (s) Magnitude
=================================================
2024-05-30 21:11:46 UT 1.76 R 300*20 20.15 +/- 0.04
The detection of the GRB afterglow is consistent with the observations of
Kumar et al., 2024, GCN 36559; Fu et al., 2024, GCN 36561; Shilling et al.,
2024, GCN 36562; Perez-Garcia et al., 2024, GCN 36563; Dutton et al., 2024,
GCN 36568; Mo et al., 2024, GCN 36569; Odeh et al., 2024, GCN 36573;
Postigo et al., 2024, GCN 36574; Adami et al., 2024, GCN 36575; Mohan et
al., 2024, GCN 36576; Vinko et al., 2024, GCN 36577; Lim et al., 2024, GCN
36579; Moskvitin et al., 2024, GCN 36582; and Pankov et al., 2024, GCN
36585.
By combining our magnitudes with the observations of Moskvitin et al.
(2024, GCN 36582) and Pankov et al. (2024, GCN 36585), we have calculated
the decay index ~ 1.44 of the R-band light curve at late time.
The given magnitude value is not corrected for the Galactic and host
extinctions in the direction of the GRB afterglow. Photometric calibration
is performed using the standard stars from the USNO-B1.0 catalog. This
circular may be cited.
GCN Circular 36585
Subject
GRB 240529A : Mondy optical observations
Date
2024-06-01T02:27:03Z (a year ago)
From
Alexei Pozanenko at IKI, Moscow <apozanen@iki.rssi.ru>
Via
legacy email
N. Pankov (HSE, IKI), A. Pozanenko (IKI), E. Klunko (ISTP), S. Belkin (IKI) report on behalf of GRB IKI FuN:
We observed the field of GRB 240529A (Eyles-Ferris et al.GCN 36556; Osborne et al. GCN 36557; Joshi et al. GCN 36560; Dichiara et al. GCN 36564; Markwardt et al. GCN 36566; Tan et al. GCN 36578) with AZT-33IK telescope of Mondy observatory in R-filter starting 2024-05-30 (UT) 17:12:21. The optical afterglow (Kumar et al. GCN 36559; Fu et al. GCN 36561; Shilling et al.GCN 36562; Perez-Garcia et al. GCN 36563; Dutton et al. GCN 36568; Mo et al. GCN 36569; Odeh et al. GCN 36573; de Ugarte Postigo et al.GCN 36574; Adami et al. GCN 36575; Mohan et al. GCN 36576; Vinko et al., GCN 36577; Lim et al. GCN 36579; Moskvitin et al. GCN 36582) is clearly detected in a stacked image.
Date UT start t-T0 Exp. Filter OT Err. UL(3 sigma)
(mid, days) (s)
2024-05-30 17:12:21 1.61308 29x120 R 19.67 0.11 21.6
The photometry is based on nearby USNO-B1.0 R2 stars.
GCN Circular 36584
Subject
Konus-Wind detection of GRB 240529A
Date
2024-05-31T22:37:34Z (a year ago)
From
Dmitry Svinkin at Ioffe Institute <svinkin@mail.ioffe.ru>
Via
legacy email
D. Svinkin, D. Frederiks, M. Ulanov, A. Tsvetkova,
A. Lysenko, A. Ridnaia, and T. Cline
on behalf of the Konus-Wind team, report:
The long-duration GRB 240529A
(Swift-BAT detection: Eyles-Ferris et al., GCN 36556;
AstroSat-CZTI detection: Joshi et al., GCN 36560;
Insight-HXMT/HE detection: Tan et al., GCN 36578;
IPN triangulation: Kozyrev et al., GCN 36583)
triggered Konus-Wind at T0=10304.829 s UT (02:51:44.829).
The burst light curve shows two separated multipeaked emission episodes.
The first episode starts at ~T0-14.1 s and has a total duration of ~150 s,
the second (detected by Swift-BAT) starts at ~T0+344 s and lasts up to ~T0+520 s.
The emission is seen up to ~3 MeV.
The Konus-Wind light curve of this GRB is available at
http://www.ioffe.ru/LEA/GRBs/GRB240529_T10304/
As observed by Konus-Wind, the burst
had a fluence of 1.3(-0.5,+0.4)x10^-4 erg/cm2,
and a 64-ms peak flux, measured from T0+6.960 s,
of 3.40(-0.93,+1.10)x10^-6 erg/cm2/s
(both in the 20 keV - 10 MeV energy range).
The time-averaged spectrum of the burst
(measured from T0 to T0+491.264 s)
is best fit in the 20 keV - 3 MeV range
by the GRB (Band) model with the following parameters:
the low-energy photon index alpha = -1.11(-0.36,+1.61),
the high energy photon index beta = -2.02(-7.98,+0.22),
the peak energy Ep = 161(-100,+203) keV
(chi2 = 56/66 dof).
The spectrum near the maximum count rate
(measured from T0 to T0+7.936 s)
is best fit in the 20 keV - 3 MeV range
by the GRB (Band) model with the following parameters:
the low-energy photon index alpha = -1.00(-0.10,+0.15),
the high energy photon index beta = -2.85(-1.37,+0.50),
the peak energy Ep = 210(-33,+26) keV
(chi2 = 61/66 dof).
Assuming the redshift z=2.695 (Ugarte Postigo et al., GCN 36574)
and a standard cosmology model with H_0 = 67.3 km/s/Mpc,
Omega_M = 0.315, and Omega_Lambda = 0.685 (Planck Collaboration, 2014),
we estimate the following rest-frame parameters:
the isotropic energy release E_iso is 2.2(-0.8,+0.7)x10^54 erg,
the peak luminosity L_iso is 2.1(-0.6,+0.7)x10^53 erg/s,
the rest-frame peak energy of the time-integrated spectrum Ep,i,z is 595(-370,+750) keV,
and the rest-frame peak energy at the peak of the emission Ep,p,z is 776(-122,+96) keV.
With the obtained estimates, GRB 240529A is inside 90% prediction band
for the 'Amati' relation and inside 68% prediction band
for the 'Yonetoku' relation derived for the sample of >300 long KW GRBs
with known redshifts (Tsvetkova et al., 2017; Tsvetkova et al., 2021),
see http://www.ioffe.ru/LEA/GRBs/GRB240529_T10304/GRB240529A_rest_frame.pdf
All the quoted errors are at the 90% confidence level.
All the quoted values are preliminary.
GCN Circular 36583
Subject
IPN triangulation of the initial episode of GRB 240529A
Date
2024-05-31T22:31:27Z (a year ago)
From
Dmitry Svinkin at Ioffe Institute <svinkin@mail.ioffe.ru>
Via
legacy email
A.S. Kozyrev, D.V. Golovin, M.L. Litvak, I.G. Mitrofanov, and A.B. Sanin
on behalf of the HEND/Mars Odyssey team,
D. Svinkin, D. Frederiks, A. Ridnaia, A. Lysenko,
and T. Cline on behalf of the Konus-Wind team,
E. Burns, on behalf of the IPN,
S. Barthelmy, J. Cummings, H. Krimm, D. Palmer, and A. Tohuvavohu
on behalf of the Swift-BAT team,
and
W. Boynton, C. Fellows, K. Harshman, H. Enos, R. Starr,
and A.S. Gardner on on behalf of the GRS-Odyssey GRB team,
report:
The long-duration GRB 240529A
(Swift-BAT detection: Eyles-Ferris et al., GCN 36556;
AstroSat-CZTI detection: Joshi et al., GCN 36560;
Insight-HXMT/HE detection: Tan et al., GCN 36578)
was detected by Swift (BAT), Konus-Wind, AstroSat (CZTI),
Insight-HXMT (HE), and Mars-Odyssey (HEND).
The burst triggered Swift-BAT at T0(BAT) = 10710.788 s UT (02:58:30.788).
The Konus-Wind lightcurve shows two emission episodes at ~T0(BAT)-400 s and ~T0(BAT)-300 s. These episodes was also detected by Swift (BAT), probably outside the coded FoV, and Mars-Odyssey (HEND).
We have triangulated the most intense episode (at ~T0(BAT)-400 s)
to a preliminary, 3 sigma error box whose coordinates are:
---------------------------------------------
RA(2000), deg Dec(2000), deg
---------------------------------------------
Center:
336.181 (22h 24m 43s) +52.215 (+52d 12' 55")
Corners:
341.510 (22h 46m 02s) +56.219 (+56d 13' 07")
331.787 (22h 07m 09s) +47.993 (+47d 59' 34")
332.038 (22h 08m 09s) +47.767 (+47d 46' 02")
341.743 (22h 46m 58s) +55.982 (+55d 58' 54")
---------------------------------------------
The error box area is 2.61 sq. deg, and its maximum
dimension is 10.2 deg (the minimum one is 15 arcmin).
The Sun distance was 73 deg.
Triangulation of the less intense episode (at ~T0(BAT)-400 s) is consistent with this IPN localization.
This localization is consistent with the Swift localization of
GRB 240529A, implying the episodes belong to GRB 240529A and extending the burst duration up to ~600 s.
A triangulation map and HEALPix FITS file are posted at
http://www.ioffe.ru/LEA/GRBs/GRB240529_T10304/IPN
The HEALPix triangulation map is the multi-order HEALPix in units of probability density.
The Konus-Wind time history and spectrum will be given in a forthcoming GCN Circular.
GCN Circular 36582
Subject
GRB 240529A: SAO RAS optical observations
Date
2024-05-31T19:24:45Z (a year ago)
From
Moskvitin Alexander at SAO RAS <mosk@sao.ru>
Via
legacy email
A. S. Moskvitin, O. I. Spiridonova and V. V. Vlasyuk (SAO RAS),
report on behalf of the GRB follow-up team.
We observed the field of the GRB 240529A (Eyles-Ferris et al.
GCN 36556; Osborne et al. GCN 36557; Joshi et al. GCN 36560;
Dichiara et al. GCN 36564; Markwardt et al. GCN 36566; Tan et al.
GCN 36578) with the SAO RAS 1m telescope Zeiss-1000 equipped
with CCD-photometer. We obtained 4 x 300 sec frames in Rc band
on May 30, 23:35:04--23:56:50 UT (t_mid - T0 = 1.8663 days).
The OT (Kumar et al. GCN 36559; Fu et al. GCN 36561; Shilling et al.
GCN 36562; Perez-Garcia et al. GCN 36563; Dutton et al. GCN 36568;
Mo et al. GCN 36569; Odeh et al. GCN 36573; de Ugarte Postigo et al.
GCN 36574; Adami et al. GCN 36575; Mohan et al. GCN 36576;
Vinko et al., GCN 36577; Lim et al. GCN 36579) is clearly detected
in the stacked frame with the brightness of R = 20.02 +/- 0.10.
The magnitudes were calibrated using R2 magnitudes of nearby USNO-B1.0
stars.
GCN Circular 36579
Subject
GRB 240529A: MAAO 0.7m telescope optical afterglow detection
Date
2024-05-31T06:20:31Z (a year ago)
From
Gu Lim at Pusan National University <lim9gu@gmail.com>
Via
Web form
Lim, Gu (PNU), Kim, Dohyeong (PNU), Im, Myungshin (SNU), Park, Keun-Hong (MAAO), and Choi, Changmin (MAAO) report on behalf of the GECKO team
We searched for the optical afterglow of GRB 240529A (Eyles-Ferris et al., GCN 36556) with a 0.7m telescope at Miryang Arirang Astronomical Observatory (MAAO; Lim et al. 2024), one of the facilities of the GW EM-Counterpart Korean Observatory (GECKO). We started the observation at 2024-05-29T17:18:13 UT and obtained 10 images of each 120s with I-band 14.3 hours after the Swift detection (GCN 36556). The photometry is performed using 2xFWHM diameter aperture. The flux is calibrated using the APASS DR9 catalog (Henden et al. 2016) by converting the Vega system to the AB system using the Lupton (2005) transformation equation. After the image subtraction using HOTPANTS (Becker et al. 2015), we detected the optical afterglow at:
R.A (J2000): 22:21:25.92
Dec. (J2000): +51:33:43.46
This coordinate is within the uncertainty radius of the enhanced Swift-XRT report (Evans et al., GCN 36557). We determine a magnitude of I=17.46+/-0.19 AB mag without galactic extinction correction. Our detection is agreed with the results of (Odeh et al., GCN 36573).
T0 = 2024-05-29T02:58:31 UT (Eyles-Ferris et al., GCN 36556)
Tmid(UT) Exptime(s) Tmid-T0(hr) FWHM(") Mag+/-Magerr Depth_3sigma Filter
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2024-05-29T17:32:38 180sx10 +14.3 5.6 17.46+/-0.19 18.40 I
Gravitational-wave EM Counterpart Korean Observatory (GECKO; Im et al. 2023, Proceedings of IAU Symp. Vol. 363, pp. 207.; Paek et al. 2024, The Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 960, Number 2, 113.) is a network of 0.5m to 1m class telescopes worldwide.
GCN Circular 36578
Subject
GRB 240529A: Insight-HXMT/HE detection
Date
2024-05-31T02:38:28Z (a year ago)
From
tanwj@ihep.ac.cn
Via
Web form
Wenjun Tan, Shaolin Xiong , Xiaobo Li and Chengkui Li
report on behalf of the Insight-HXMT team:
At 2024-05-29T02:58:31.000 (T0), Insight-HXMT/HE detected
GRB 240529A(trigger ID: HEB240529123) in a routine search of the data,
which was also observed by Swift (Eyles-Ferris et al. GCN 36556; C. B. Markwardt et al. GCN 36566).
The Insight-HXMT/HE light curve consists of multiple
pulses with a duration (T90) of 66.23s measured from T0-37.26 s.
The 1s peak rate, measured from T0-0.159 s, is 3138 cnts/sec.
The total counts from this burst is 53027 counts.
URL_LC: https://twikinew.ihep.ac.cn/pubhxmt/HXMT/GRBList/HEB240529123_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://hxmtweb.ihep.ac.cn/
GCN Circular 36577
Subject
GRB 240529A: optical photometry from Konkoly
Date
2024-05-30T20:41:31Z (a year ago)
From
Jozsef Vinko at Konkoly Observator <vinko@konkoly.hu>
Via
legacy email
GRB 240529A: optical photometry from Konkoly
J. Vinko, A. Sodor, R. Konyves-Toth, L. Kriskovics, A. Pal, R. Szakats
(Konkoly Observatory, Hungary)
We report detection and photometry of the optical afterglow of GRB 240529A
(Eyles-Ferris et al. GCN 36556; Osborne et al. GCN 36557; Dichiara et al.
GCN 36564; Markwardt et al. GCN 36566) taken with the RC80 robotic telescope
at Piszkesteto Station of Konkoly Observatory, Hungary. The observations
started on 2024-05-29 22:40:46.49 UT. 5 sets of 300 sec frames were collected
through Sloan g', r'- and i' bands.
The optical afterglow (Kumar et al. GCN 36559; Joshi et al. GCN 36560; Fu et al.
GCN 36561; Shilling et al. GCN 36562; Perez-Garcia et al. GCN 36563;
Dutton et al. GCN 36568; Mo et al. GCN 36569; Odeh et al. GCN 36573;
de Ugarte Postigo et al. GCN 36574