GRB 250314A
GCN Circular 40553
Subject
GRB 250314A: CIDER NB1008 upper limit
Date
2025-05-27T12:41:08Z (7 months ago)
From
Zhen-Ya Zheng at Shanghai Astronomical Observatory, CAS <zhengzy@shao.ac.cn>
Via
Web form
Z.-Y. Zheng (SHAO), S.R. Zhu (SHAO), J. X. Wang (USTC), J. E. Rhoads (NASA/GSFC), S. Malhotra (NASA/GSFC), I. G. B. Wold (NASA/GSFC), F. Barrientos (PUC), L. Infante (LCO), W. Hu (TAMU), C. Jiang (SHAO), D. Xu (NAOC), and F. Valdes (NOIRLab) report on behalf of the CIDER collaboration:
We observed the near-infrared NB1008 narrowband counterpart (Malesani et al., GCN 39727; see also Kennea et al., GCN 39734; Turpin et al., GCN 39739) of the SVOM/ECLAIRs GRB 250314A (Wang et al., GCN 39719), using the Blanco 4m Telescope equipped with the Dark Energy Camera and a small fraction of the CIDER project’s observing time. A sequence of 19 exposures of 540 s each and 4 exposures of 180s each (3.1 hrs in total) was secured in the NB1008 band, with mid time 2025 April 3 (on Apr. 2-4, about 20 days after the GRB).
In a preliminary reduction, no source is detected at the GRB position down to a 1-sigma upper limiting magnitude NB1008 ~ 23.5 (AB), calibrated with the communication pipeline for DES.
We also took a 0.35 hrs exposure in the i-band with DECam and no source is detected down to a 1-sigma upper limiting magnitude of i ~ 26.7 (AB), consistent with the high redshift of this GRB.
If the redshift 7.27 is correct from the previous spectroscopic and photometric confirmation (z ~ 7.27; Malesani et al., GCN 39732; Rakotondrainibe et al., GCN 39743), the NB1008 filter would cover the pure Lya flux of the GRB host galaxy. The NB1008 band‘s 1-sigma upper limit of 23.5 (AB) can be converted to a Lya flux of < 4.2e-17 erg/cm^2/s, and a Lya luminosity of < 3.1e+43 erg/s at z=7.27. Based on the line emission ratio of Lya to Ha in Case B recombination (Osterbrock et al. 1989) and the relation between SFR and the Ha luminosity (Kennicutt 1998), the derived SFR of the GRB host galaxy is < 28 M_sun/yr (1-sigma upper limit).
GCN Circular 40134
Subject
GRB 250314A: e-MERLIN observations
Date
2025-04-10T20:17:58Z (9 months ago)
From
Aishwarya L Thakur at INAF-IAPS, Rome <aishth@outlook.com>
Via
Web form
A.L. Thakur [1], G. Bruni [1], L. Piro [1] and G. Gianfagna [1] report:
We observed the z=7.3 GRB 250314A (SVOM GCN 39719, VLT/X-shooter GCN 39732, GTC/OSIRIS+ GCN 39743), with the e-MERLIN radio telescope under project RR19004 (PI: Thakur) at 5 GHz starting from Mar 31 (~17 days post-GRB) for three runs of ~12 hours each.
1331+3030 was used for flux scale calibration, and 1332-0509 for complex gain. The beam size was 122x34 milli-arcsec. Data were reduced with the e-MERLIN pipeline and imaged with CASA. The image RMS was 18 uJy/beam.
We do not find statistically significant emission at a level above 5-sigma at the position of the NOT counterpart (GCN 39727) or in the broader 2x2 arcsec field. We thus set a 5-sigma upper limit of 90 uJy at 5 GHz.
Further e-MERLIN observations are planned.
We thank the e-MERLIN director for promptly approving these DDT observations and acknowledge Justin Bray's excellent support in scheduling and executing them. e-MERLIN is a National Facility operated by the University of Manchester at Jodrell Bank Observatory on behalf of STFC, part of UK Research and Innovation.
—------------------------
[1] INAF-IAPS
GCN Circular 40012
Subject
GRB 250314A: ALMA detection
Date
2025-04-02T20:20:24Z (9 months ago)
From
Tanmoy Laskar at U of Utah <tanmoylaskar@gmail.com>
Via
Web form
T. Laskar (University of Utah), R. Margutti, R. Chornock, Nayana A. J. (UC Berkeley), K. D. Alexander (University of Arizona), and H. Sears (Rutgers University) report:
“We observed the high-redshift (z ~ 7.3; Malesani et al., GCN 39732; Rakotondrainibe et al., GCN 39743) SVOM/ECLAIRs GRB 250314A (Wang et al., GCN 39719) with the Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array (ALMA) beginning on 2025 March 26 02:55 UTC (11.6 days after the burst) at multiple frequencies.
Preliminary analysis reveals a mm source with flux density of ~ 40 microJy at 42 GHz at position:
RA (J2000) = 13:25:12.14
Dec (J2000) = -05:16:55.29
with an uncertainty of 0.18" in each coordinate. This is consistent with the optical position (Malesani et al., GCN 39727) and radio position (Nayana A. J. et al., GCN 39954). We note that GRBs 250314A and 090423 (z ~ 8.2; Tanvir et al., Nature, 461, 7268, 1254; Castro Tirado et al., GCN 9273; de Ugarte Postigo et al., A&A, 538, A44, 2012) are the highest-redshift GRBs with mm-band detections so far. Further ALMA observations are planned.
We thank the ALMA Director for rapidly granting our DDT request and the JAO staff, AoD, P2G, and the entire ALMA team for their help with these observations."
GCN Circular 39954
Subject
GRB 250314A: VLA detection
Date
2025-03-31T02:49:59Z (9 months ago)
From
Tanmoy Laskar at U of Utah <tanmoylaskar@gmail.com>
Via
Web form
Nayana A. J. (UC Berkeley), T. Laskar (University of Utah), R. Margutti (UC Berkeley), K. D. Alexander (University of Arizona), R. Chornock (UC Berkeley), E. Berger (Harvard University), W. Fong (Northwestern University), P. Schady (University of Bath), and G. Schroeder (Cornell University) report:
"We carried out Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) observations of the high-redshift (z ~ 7.3; Malesani et al., GCN 39732; Rakotondrainibe et al., GCN 39743) SVOM/ECLAIRs GRB 250314A (Wang et al., GCN 39719) beginning on 2025 March 21 06:26 UTC (6.7 days after the burst) at multiple frequencies. In preliminary analysis, we detect a radio counterpart with a flux density of ~ 0.1 mJy at 17 GHz, and position:
RA (J2000) = 13:25:12.16
Dec (J2000) = -05:16:55.07
with a (statistical) uncertainty of 0.6" in each coordinate. This position is consistent with the optical position (Malesani et al., GCN 39727). Further observations are planned.
We thank the VLA staff for scheduling and executing these observations"
GCN Circular 39797
Subject
GRB 250314A: Keck/NIRC2 J-band upper limit
Date
2025-03-21T06:55:25Z (10 months ago)
From
Weikang Zheng at UC Berkeley <weikang@berkeley.edu>
Via
email
WeiKang Zheng, Alexei V. Filippenko (UC Berkeley), Chris Fassnacht,
Prayaag Katta (UC Davis), D. B. Malesani (DAWN/NBI) and Jing Wang (NAOC),
report on behalf of the KAIT GRB team:
We observed the field of the SVOM GRB 250314A (Wang et al., GCN 39719)
with the NIRC2 camera on the Keck II 10 m telescope. The observations
were performed in the J band (without AO) starting on 2025 March 16 at
12:54:21 UTC (i.e., 2.0 days after the burst), and consisted of 2x120 s
exposures. At the reported NIR afterglow position (Malesani et al.,
GCN 39727