GRB 250327B
GCN Circular 40059
Subject
GRB 250327B: VIRT Optical Upper Limit
Date
2025-04-04T16:21:28Z (6 months 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), B. Gendre (UVI), D. Morris (NASA), T. Lombardi (Eckerd College), F. George (ERAU), D. Smith (UVI), C. Watson (UVI) report:
We observed the field of GRB 250327B (Bouchet et al., GCN 39888) detected by SVOM/ECLAIRs with the 0.5m Virgin Island Robotic Telescope (VIRT) at the University of the Virgin Islands' Etelman Observatory on 2025-03-28 starting at 06:52:58.6 (T-mid ~ T0 + 10.5 hrs). We performed a series of exposures in an R filter with a total exposure of 2560s. The weather conditions were partly cloudy during the hours of observation with an average airmass of 1.6.
We do not detect any source at the position reported by SAO/RAS (Moskvitin et al., GCN 39889). This non-detection is consistent with reported detections (Moskvitin et al., GCN 39889; Pankov et al., GCN 39906; Xin et al., GCN 39890; O’Neill et al., GCN 39891;Malesani et al., GCN 39893; Lian et al, GCN 39894; Shrestha et al., GCN 39896; Kumar et al., GCN 39904; Pérez-Fournon et al., GCN 39912; Ducoin et al., GCN 39897; Ducoin et. al., GCN 39930; Perley et al., GCN 39902; Dennefeld et al., GCN 39905; Tarasenkov et al., GCN 39913; Broens et. al., GCN 40006 and Siegel et. al., GCN 40009) and upper limits (Mo et. al., GCN 39914 and della Vecchia et. al., GCN 39969). We report the following 3-sigma upper limit:
T_mid ||Exposure ||Filter ||Limit
T+ 10.5 hrs || 2560 s || R || > 20.8
The limit is estimated from comparison to nearby USNO B1 stars and is not corrected for Galactic extinction.
We acknowledge financial support from NASA EPSCoR award 80NNSC22M0063, NSF PAARE award 2319415, and NASA EPSCoR award 80NSSC24M0112. This message can be cited.
GCN Circular 40009
Subject
GRB 250327B: Swift/UVOT Detection
Date
2025-04-02T13:32:05Z (6 months ago)
From
Mike Siegel at PSU/Swift MOC <mhs18@psu.edu>
Via
Web form
M.H. Siegel (PSU) reports on behalf of the Swift/UVOT team:
The Swift/UVOT began settled observations of the field of GRB 250327B 1753 s after the SVOM trigger sb25032706 (GCN Circ. 39888). A fading source consistent with the XRT position (Page et al., GCN Circ. 39895) and the optical counterpart (Moskvitin et al., GCN Circ. 39889; Xin et al., GCN Circ. 39890; O’Neill et al., GCN Circ. 39891; Lian et al., GCN Circ. 39894; Shrestha et al., GCN Circ. 39896; Ducoin et al., GCN Circ. 39897; Perley & Bochenek; GCN Circ. 39902; Kumar et al., GCN Circ. 39904; Dennefeld et al., GCN circ. 39905; Pankov et al., GCN circ. 39906) is detected in the initial UVOT exposures.
Preliminary detections and 3-sigma upper limits for the early exposures are:
Filter T_start(s) T_stop(s) Exp(s) Mag(AB)
u 1753 2505 740 19.78+/-0.18
u 91894 113326 2601 >21.28
The magnitudes in the table are not corrected for the Galactic extinction due to the reddening of E(B-V) = 0.018 in the direction of the burst (Schlegel et al. 1998).
GCN Circular 40006
Subject
GRB 250327B: Kilonova-Catcher Observations
Date
2025-04-02T01:27:54Z (6 months ago)
From
Cristina Andrade at UMN <andra104@umn.edu>
Via
Web form
E. Broens, F. Dubois, M. Freeberg, A. Lekic, G. Parent, M. Serrau (KNC), C. Andrade (UMN), E. de Bruin (UMN), D. Turpin (CEA-Saclay/Irfu), S. Antier (OCA), M. Coughlin (UMN),S. Karpov (FZU), I. Tosta e Melo (UniCT-DFA), P. Hello (IJCLAB), P-A Duverne (APC), T. Pradier (Unistra/IPHC), N. Guessoum (AUS) on behalf of the GRANDMA/Kilonova-Catcher collaboration:
We observed the field of GRB 250327B (Bouchet et al., GCN 39888) detected by SVOM/ECLAIRs with the citizen science project, Kilonova-Catcher (KNC). These observations were performed by our members using the following telescopes: T-BRO, ODK16 f/6.8, Quatro F4, T180, a Newton telescope T200 and using the Telescope Live Network.
In our stacked frames, we detected an optical afterglow at the position reported by SAO/RAS (Moskvitin et al., GCN 39889, Pankov et al. GCN 39906), SVOM/VT (Xin et al., GCN 39890), GOTO (O’Neill et al. GCN 39891), the NOT (Malesani et al., GCN 39893), Mephisto (Lian et al, GCN 39894), the LCOGT (Shrestha et al. GCN 39896, Kumar et al. GCN 39904, Pérez-Fournon et al. GCN 39912), SVOM/COLIBRI (F-GFT) (Ducoin et al., GCN 39897, 39930), the Liverpool telescope (Perley et al., GCN 39902), the OHP/T193 telescope (Dennefeld et al. GCN 39905) and MASTER (Tarasenkov et al., GCN 39913).
We report some of our detections and upper limits (5 sigma) in the following table:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Tstart-TGRB (hr) | Exposure | Mag | UL (5σ) | Filter | Telescope |
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| 1.62 | 180s | 16.87 ± 0.06 | | Rc (Vega) | T-BRO |
| 1.67 | 180s | 17.48 ± 0.10 | | V (Vega) | T-BRO |
| 3.29 | 10x60s | 18.98 ± 0.09 | | V (Vega) | ODK16 f/6.8 |
| 3.52 | 180s | | 17.8 | V (Vega) | Quatro F4 |
| 3.56 | 2x300s | 19.78 ± 0.11 | | g’ (AB) | ODK16 f/6.8 |
| 3.58 | 180s | | 17.6 | R (Vega) | Quatro F4 |
| 3.81 | 3x300s | 18.93 ± 0.17 | | r’ (AB) | ODK16 f/6.8 |
| 4.24 |10x180s | 19.73 ± 0.21 | | V (Vega) | T-BRO |
| 6.49 |10x180s | | 20.6 | g’ (AB) | T180 |
| 6.51 |15x180s | 20.16 ± 0.36 | | Rc (Vega) | T-BRO |
| 6.74 |10x180s | 19.87 ± 0.24 | | r’ (AB) | T180 |
| 29.07 |100x40s | | 20.3 | r’ (AB) | Newton T200 |
| 76.42 | 59x80s | | 20.5 | V (Vega) | Telescope Live T200 |
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All the data have been reduced by a single data processing pipeline, STDPipe (Karpov et al., 2022, 2025). Images obtained in Johnson Cousin filters were calibrated using the Gaia DR3 Synphot catalog. Images obtained with sloan filters were calibrated using the PanSTARRS DR1 catalog.
We use the SkyPortal application (skyportal.io) to monitor our observational campaign (Coughlin et al. 2023).
GRANDMA is a worldwide telescope network (grandma.ijclab.in2p3.fr) devoted to the observation of transients in the context of multi-messenger astrophysics (Antier et al. 2020 MNRAS 497, 5518). Kilonova-Catcher (KNC) is the citizen science program of GRANDMA (http://kilonovacatcher.in2p3.fr/).
GCN Circular 39978
Subject
Konus-Wind detection of GRB 250327B
Date
2025-03-31T16:40:41Z (6 months ago)
From
Dmitry Svinkin at Ioffe Institute <svinkin@mail.ioffe.ru>
Via
Web form
D. Svinkin, D. Frederiks, A. Lysenko, A. Ridnaia,
A. Tsvetkova, M. Ulanov, and T. Cline,
on behalf of the Konus-Wind team, report:
The long-duration GRB 250327B
(SVOM-ECLAIRs detection: Bouchet et al., GCN 39888)
was detected by Konus-Wind (KW) in the waiting mode
at T0 = T0(ECLAIRs) = 76287 s UT (21:11:27).
A Bayesian block analysis of the KW waiting mode data
in the 20-1200 keV band reveals a ~20 sigma count rate
increase in the interval from ~T0-12 s to ~T0+424 s.
The Konus-Wind light curve of this GRB is available at
http://www.ioffe.ru/LEA/GRBs/GRB250327B/
The total burst fluence is 2.31(-0.22,+0.26)x10^-5 erg/cm^2,
and the 2.944 s peak energy flux, measured from T0+85 s,
is 2.43(-0.52,+0.55)x10^-7 erg/cm^2.
(both in the 20 keV - 10 MeV energy range).
The time-integrated spectrum of the burst,
measured from T0-12 s to T0+424 s,
can be described by a power law with exponential cutoff (CPL) model
dN/dE ~ (E^alpha)*exp(-E*(2+alpha)/Ep)
with alpha = -1.11(-0.17,+0.21) and Ep = 212(-38,+48) keV.
The spectrum near the peak count rate, measured from T0+76 s to T0+91 s,
can be described by a CPL model with
alpha = -0.82(-0.31,+0.43) and Ep = 203(-49,+64) keV.
Assuming the redshift z=3.035 (Malesani et al., GCN 39893)
and a standard cosmology 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 4.78(-0.45,+0.54)x10^53 erg,
the peak luminosity L_iso is 2.03(-0.44,+0.46)x10^52 erg/s,
the rest-frame peak energy of the time-averaged spectrum Ep,i,z is 856(-152,+195) keV and
the spectrum near the maximum count rate Ep,p,z is 818(-198,+257) keV.
With the obtained estimates, GRB 250327B is inside 68% prediction band for the 'Amati' and
90% prediction band for the 'Yonetoku' relations 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/GRB250327B/GRB250327B_rest_frame.pdf
All the quoted errors are estimated at the 68% confidence level.
All the presented results are preliminary.
GCN Circular 39933
Subject
GRB 250327B: ALMA detection
Date
2025-03-29T21:34:47Z (6 months ago)
From
Tanmoy Laskar at U of Utah <tanmoylaskar@gmail.com>
Via
Web form
T. Laskar (University of Utah), N. Franz, C. Christy, K. D. Alexander (University of Arizona), E. Berger (Harvard University), R. Chornock (UC Berkeley), W. Fong (Northwestern University), R. Margutti (UC Berkeley), P. Schady (University of Bath), and G. Schroeder (Cornell University), report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
“We observed GRB 250327B (Bouchet et al., GCN 39888) with the Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array (ALMA) at 97.5 GHz beginning on 2025 March 29 at 01:45 UT (28.5 hours after the burst).
Preliminary analysis reveals a mm source with flux density of ~ 0.5 mJy at position:
RA (J2000) = 11:47:06.72
Dec (J2000) = +29:50:24.71
with an uncertainty of 0.05" in each coordinate. This is consistent with the X-ray position (Bouchet et al., GCN 39888; Page et al. GCN 39895), optical position (Moskvitin et al., GCN 39889; Xin et al., GCN 39890), and radio position (Christy et al., GCN 39932).
We thank the JAO staff, AoD, P2G, and the entire ALMA team for their help with these observations."
GCN Circular 39932
Subject
GRB 250327B: VLA detection
Date
2025-03-29T21:32:49Z (6 months ago)
From
Tanmoy Laskar at U of Utah <tanmoylaskar@gmail.com>
Via
Web form
C. Christy, N. Franz (University of Arizona), T. Laskar (University of Utah), K. D. Alexander (University of Arizona), E. Berger (Harvard University), R. Chornock (UC Berkeley), W. Fong (Northwestern University), R. Margutti (UC Berkeley), P. Schady (University of Bath), and G. Schroeder (Cornell University), report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
“We observed GRB 250327B (Bouchet et al., GCN 39888) with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) at multiple frequencies beginning on 2025 March 29 at 03:00 UT (29.8 hours after the burst).
In preliminary analysis, we detect a radio counterpart at 15.1 GHz with a flux density of ~0.2 mJy at the position:
RA (J2000) = 11:47:06.72 +/- 0.08”
Dec (J2000) = +29:50:24.89 +/- 0.05”
This is consistent with the X-ray position (Bouchet et al., GCN 39888; Page et al. GCN 39895) and optical position (Moskvitin et al., GCN 39889; Xin et al., GCN 39890