GRB 990123
GCN Circular 732
Subject
GRB990123: Late-time HST/STIS observations of the host
Date
2000-06-27T22:30:58Z (25 years ago)
From
Andrew S. Fruchter at STScI <fruchter@stsci.edu>
A. Fruchter (STScI) reports for the HST GRB collaboration:
It has come to our attention that the web page reported in our last circular,
GCN 712, did not load properly for outside users. The GRB 990123 page that
they saw was unchanged from last year.
We have corrected this problem. Readers wishing to see the light curve of
the OT, or the late-time imageing of the host, can either click on the
animated gif of the decline of GRB 990123 at
http://www.stsci.edu/~fruchter/GRB
or go directly to
http://www.stsci.edu/~fruchter/GRB/990123 .
We have now also included a color image of the host and the wider field about
GRB 990123 created using the both the open (50CCD) images (see GCN 712)
and the more recent long pass STIS data (GCN 715).
GCN Circular 715
Subject
GRB990123, HST/STIS observations of the host galaxy
Date
2000-06-18T17:15:20Z (25 years ago)
From
Stephen Holland at IFA, U of Aarhus <holland@ifa.au.dk>
Stephen Holland, Johan Fynbo, Bjarne Thomsen (University of Aarhus),
Michael Andersen (University of Oulu),
Gunnlaugur Bjornsson (University of Iceland),
Jens Hjorth (University of Copenhagen),
Andreas Jaunsen (University of Oslo),
Priya Natarajan (Universities of Cambridge, & Yale), and
Nial Tanvir (University of Hertfordshire)
We have obtained 8224 seconds of STIS images with the F28X50LP
(long pass) aperture of the host galaxy of GRB 990123. This data was
taken as part of the Survey of the Host Galaxies of Gamma-Ray Bursts
(Holland et al. GCN 698) approximately 509 days after the burst.
Combined images are now available at
"http://www.ifa.au.dk/~hst/grb_hosts/data/index.html".
Using the light curve fits of Holland et al. (2000, submitted
to A&A) we predict that the optical afterglow will have R = 31.6 on 15
June 2000, and thus will not be visible in the STIS images.
Therefore, we used aperture photometry to determine the AB magnitudes,
in the long pass filter, of the three knots found by Holland & Hjorth
(1999, A&A, 344, L67). We find the following colours for the three
extended knots where CL is the AB magnitude in the STIS clear
aperture, LP is the AB magnitude in the STIS long pass aperture, and
beta is the corresponding spectral index, f = k*nu^beta.
Knot CL LP CL-LP beta
1 28.3 28.2 +0.1 +/- 0.4 -0.4
2 28.1 27.5 +0.6 +/- 0.4 -2.6
3 28.0 27.5 +0.5 +/- 0.4 -2.2
The GRB occurred on the southeast edge of Knot 1. This knot is
approximately one sigma bluer than the other two knots, and two sigma
bluer than the overall colour of the galaxy (V-R = 0.43 +/- 0.18;
Castro-Tirado et al., 1999, Science 283, 2069). This suggests that
Knot 1 might be undergoing stronger star formation than the rest of
the galaxy.
GCN Circular 712
Subject
GRB 990123: Late-time HST/STIS 50CCD observations of the host
Date
2000-06-17T02:51:46Z (25 years ago)
From
Andrew S. Fruchter at STScI <fruchter@stsci.edu>
A. Fruchter (STScI), S. Thorsett (UCSB), R. Wijers (SUNY) report for the
larger HST GRB collaboration:
Public HST observations in the red (LP) STIS filter should shortly be
available of the host galaxy of GRB 990123. We therefore report here
on the results of late-time imaging of the host by our group using the
wide-band open (50CCD) filter. The images described here can be found
at http://www.stsci.edu/~fruchter/GRB , and will be submitted to a
journal shortly.
The field of GRB 990123 was reobserved by HST with the STIS CCD in open
filter (50CCD) mode during two orbits on 7 February 2000, or 380 days
after the GRB. The optical transient was no longer visible. However
we have been able to use this image to further refine our earlier
photometry on the OT (Fruchter et al. 1999a,b). We now find
a V magnitude for the OT of 25.4 +/- 0.1 on 8 February 1999 and
V = 27.7 +/- 0.15 on 23 March 1999, implying that the late time
late-time light curve falls as t^{-1.7 +/- 0.1}. This represents a
break of about 0.65 from the power-law decay a couple of days after
outburst, and thus is roughly consistent with the beaming model of
Meszaros and Rees (1999). However, this also agrees within the errors
with the power-law of the early time light curve reported by ROTSE, and
this may suggest a connection between the early and late-time
emission.
The GRB is found to reside near the edge of the visible stellar field
of the host, and is not superposed on a strong region of star-formation.
References:
Akerlof, C. et al, 1999, Nature, 398 400.
Fruchter, A. et al., 1999, Ap. J. (Letters), 519, L13.
Fruchter, A. et al., 1999, GCN 354.
Meszaros, P. and Rees, M., 1998, MNRAS, 306L, 39.
GCN Circular 354
Subject
Late-time HST/STIS Observation of GRB 990123
Date
1999-06-22T08:49:41Z (26 years ago)
From
Andrew S. Fruchter at STScI <fruchter@stsci.edu>
TITLE: Late-time HST Observations of GRB 990123
Subject: HST/STIS Observations of GRB 990123
A. Fruchter (STScI), S. Thorsett (Princeton), and E. Pian (ITESRE)
report for the HST GRB collaboration:
The field of GRB 990123 was reobserved by HST with the STIS CCD in open
filter (50CCD) mode during two orbits on 23 March 1999, or 59.5 days
after the GRB. The total exposure time was 5040s. The optical
transient was visible, but had declined by 2.1 +/- 0.2 mags from that
observed on 8 February 1999 by HST (Fruchter et al. 1999, Kulkarni et
al 1999), to V = 27.55 +/- 0.2 mags.
Both of the HST observations of the OT of GRB 990123 fall well below
the t^{-1.09} power-law behavior of the OT during the first three days
(Fruchter et al. 1999). The 8 February observation lies more than 2
mags below the continuation of such a power-law. Additionally, a
power-law fit of the flux density of the OT finds between the two
HST observations finds t^{-1.52 +/- 0.15}; this slope is nearly 3 sigma
steeper than that found through day 3, but is also noticeably shallower than
that predicted from a break in the power-law due to either our now
observing the edge of a collimated outflow (Meszaros and Rees 1999) or
the sideways expansion of such an outflow (Kulkarni et al. 1999, Rhoads
1999).
The HST images from both epochs will be made available in gif format
at http://www.stsci.edu/~fruchter/GRB/990123. The reduced HST data
from the first epoch are also available in fits format at this
site. The reduced data of the second observation will be made
available later, in accordance with the HST GRB Collaboration
policy of making reduced data publicly available upon publication
in a refereed journal.
References:
Fruchter, A. et al., 1999, Ap. J. (Letters), 519, L13.
Kulkarni, S. et al., 1999, Nature, 398, 389.
Meszaros, P. and Rees, M., 1999, MNRAS (submitted), astro-ph/9902367.
Rhoads, J., 1999, Ap. J. (submitted), astro-ph/990399.
GCN Circular 307
Subject
GRB 990123, optical monitoring
Date
1999-05-10T19:04:54Z (26 years ago)
From
Arne A. Henden at USNO/USRA <aah@nofs.navy.mil>
The U. S. Naval Observatory GRB Team (A. Henden (USRA/USNO),
R. Stone, F. Vrba, C. Luginbuhl, B. Canzian, J. Munn, S. Levine,
H. Guetter (USNO)) report:
We have been monitoring the Optical Transient position
for GRB 990123 with the USNOFS 0.2-m FASTT system (Stone et.
al. 1996, AJ 111, 1721).
As this is a converted transit telescope, we were not
able to begin observations until the field started to
transit in darkness. However, we have single-epoch
data for the following nights (yymmdd UT):
990225 990302 990303 990304 990305
990309 990310 990316 990320 990321
990322 990323 990329 990330 990331
Typical limiting magnitude at R was 18.3. We saw no
recurrence of the transient during this period.
We also report single-epoch JHK measures (with the USNO
1.55-m telescope and infrared camera) on 990202, and
J measures on 990328 and 990427. Typical limiting magnitude at
J was 17.5. No recurrence was seen.
GCN Circular 268
Subject
GRB 990123, Field Photometry
Date
1999-02-26T18:13:16Z (27 years ago)
From
Arne A. Henden at USNO/USRA <aah@nofs.navy.mil>
BVRI photometry in the field of GRB 990123 was performed with
the USNO 1.0-m telescope in Flagstaff during the February dark run.
Results of that photometry have been posted at:
ftp://ftp.nofs.navy.mil/pub/outgoing/aah/grb/grb990123.dat
with a more complete description of the photometric procedures in:
ftp://ftp.nofs.navy.mil/pub/outgoing/aah/grb/grb990123.readme
Objects 1-18 in the photometry file are numbered identically to
Nilakshi, et. al. (GCN 252). Other objects are either fainter
stars in the same field, or else brighter stars within the 11x11
arcmin field of the CCD to be used for field identification.
We have omitted the obviously extended objects 7, 9, and 16.
We note some photometric differences between Nilakshi and this
new photometry.
GCN Circular 261
Subject
GRB990123: Caltech STIS Photometry and Images
Date
1999-02-19T13:52:30Z (27 years ago)
From
Steve Odewahn at Caltech <sco@astro.caltech.edu>
S. C. Odewahn, J. S. Bloom, S. Djorgovski, S. R. Kulkarni,
and F. Harrison (CIT) report on behalf of the Caltech-NRAO-CARA
GRB Collaboration:
We have processed the HST STIS images of GRB 990123 using a variety
of techniques and have deduced the following magnitudes:
Estimates of Gunn r magnitudes from the Median stack STIS image:
r(OT) = 25.25 -+0.2 systematic+accidental error
r(OT+GAL) = 24.16 -+0.1 accidental error only
r(A2) = 27.18 -+0.02 accidental error only
r(OT+GAL+A2) = 24.09
Estimates of Gunn r magnitudes from the drizzled STIS image:
r(OT) = 25.28 -+0.2 systematic+accidental error
r(OT+GAL) = 24.12 -+0.1 systematic+accidental error
r(A2) = 27.23 -+0.02 systematic+accidental error
r(OT+GAL+A2) = 24.06
Details of the reduction, the image properties and a map defining
the apertures for OT, GAL, and A2 (a discrete source 0.9" from
the OT) may be found at:
http://astro.caltech.edu/~sco/sco1/research/grb/grb990123/stis.html
In this website we detail the procedure for obtaining by anonymous
ftp our final STIS images, a deep Keck R-band image, and the Palomar
60-inch OT discovery image discussed in GCN 201. These data may be
used without any need to cite the source.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 260
Subject
GRB990123 observations
Date
1999-02-19T13:42:03Z (27 years ago)
From
Christian Veillet at CFHT <veillet@cfht.hawaii.edu>
Christian Veillet reports:
The optical transient (OT) associated with the gamma ray burst GRB990123
has been observed with the new wide field camera CFH12k at the prime focus
of the 3.6-m CFH Telescope for two additional nights on 1999 Feb. 8.6 and
9.6 by C. Veillet in the course of the French GRB follow-up program
at CFHT (M. Boer, CESR, C. Veillet, CFHT) with the assistance of
J. Anderson (University of Victoria - Canada), as a continuation
of the observations reported in GCN 253 from the three previous nights.
Using only the last three nights (image quality better than 1 arc-second),
photometric measurements in B, V and R using the star #18 published by
Nilakshi et al. (GCN 252) give the following results:
R = 23.41 (0.1) on 1999 Feb. 8.6 - 130 mn total integration time
V = 24.05 (0.1) on 1999 Feb. 8.6 - 50 mn total integration time
B = 24.46 (0.15) on 1999 Feb. 9.6 - 30 mn total integration time
The V magnitude is in good agreement with the HST estimate
of the OT+galaxy magnitude (V~24 GCN 255).
As suspected from the first published image based on the first three nights
(GCN 253) with the first two of poor image quality, the surrounding galaxy
is now clearly resolved. A composite image in R and contour maps
of the GRB area and of a nearby comparison star are available at the Web site
http://www.cfht.hawaii.edu/~veillet/grb990123.html
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 257
Subject
GRB990123, Optical Observation
Date
1999-02-15T05:21:39Z (27 years ago)
From
Jules Halpern at Columbia U. <jules@astro.columbia.edu>
J. P. Halpern, Y. Yadigaroglu, K. M. Leighly, & J. Kemp (Columbia U.)
report on behalf of the MDM Observatory GRB follow-up team:
"We imaged the field of GRB 990123 in the R band on Feb. 14.50 UT using
the MDM Observatory 2.4m telescope. A total of 100 minutes exposure was
obtained in seeing of 0.9 arcsec. An object is detected at a position
consistent with that of the GRB host galaxy as measured in the HST STIS
image (Bloom et al. astro-ph/9902182). Its magnitude is R = 23.77 +/- 0.10
(referenced to the comparison star of GCN #207), equivalent to Gunn r = 24.10.
Since this is consistent with the estimate of r = 24.0-24.2 for the host
galaxy alone by Bloom et al., we conclude that the optical transient is no
longer making a detectable contribution to the total light in ground-based
images.
We also report a revised magnitude on Feb. 3.54 of R = 23.55 +/- 0.24,
after more detailed analysis of those data.
Further HST observations are therefore needed to follow the unusual afterglow
decay of this most energetic GRB.
The latest MDM image will be posted at http://cba.phys.columbia.edu/grb/
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 256
Subject
GRB 990123: Discovery of the Probable Host Galaxy
Date
1999-02-09T21:41:21Z (27 years ago)
From
George Djorgovski at Caltech/Palomar <george@oracle.caltech.edu>
GRB 990123: Discovery of the Probable Host Galaxy
S. G. Djorgovski, S. R. Kulkarni, J. S. Bloom, G. Neugebauer, C. Koresko
(Caltech), L. Armus (IPAC), S. C. Odewahn, B. R. Oppenheimer, R. R. Gal
(Caltech), N. Kobayashi (NAOJ), and D. A. Frail (NRAO), report on behalf
of the Caltech-CARA-NRAO GRB collaboration:
We confirm the detection of a faint galaxy approximately 0.6 arcsec due north
from the optical transient (OT) associated with GRB 990123, in the K-band
images obtained with the NIRC instrument at the Keck-I 10-m telescope, on the
nights of 29 January 1999 and 6, 7, and 8 February 1999 UT. The presence of
this object was already suggested in the Keck K-band images obtained on 27
January 1999 UT by Malkan et al., and its K-band magnitude was estimated to
be about 22 to 23 (see Djorgovski et al., GCN 243). The galaxy is clearly
resolved from the OT in the images obtained on 29 January by Neugebauer and
Armus; it has about an equal magnitude as the OT in the images taken on 7
and 8 February by Kulkarni and Oppenheimer, i.e., K =~ 22 +- 0.7 mag.
The K-band light curve containing the light from both objects begins to show
a flattening due to the presence of this galaxy. The deviation from the
power-law light curve in the K-band (Bloom et al., GCN 240), assumed to
have the slope alpha = -1.15 (as measured in the r band), implies the galaxy
magnitude K =~ 22.4 (+0.9, -0.4; 1-sigma), in a good agreement with the
previous estimates.
We interpret this object as the most likely counterpart of the absorber
at z = 1.600 (IAUC 7096, GCN 219, GCN 249, GCN 251), and the probable
host galaxy of the GRB. Its observed K-band magnitude is reasonable for
a normal galaxy at z = 1.6.
Analysis of the HST images of the field shows the same object (GCN 255),
and further details will be reported shortly.
A Keck image of the field will be posted at:
http://astro.caltech.edu/~george/grb/grb990123.html
This report is citeable.
GCN Circular 255
Subject
GRB 990123: Reduced HST Images
Date
1999-02-09T19:22:51Z (27 years ago)
From
Andrew S. Fruchter at STScI <fruchter@stsci.edu>
Andrew Fruchter, Kailash Sahu, Harry Ferugson, Mario Livio
and Mark Metzger on behalf of the larger HST GRB
collaboration report:
We have reduced the HST STIS CCD clear (50CCD) images of
GRB 990123 announced earlier today by the Director of STScI,
Steven Beckwith, in GCN 254.
We find the optical transient to be superposed on an extended
irregular galaxy. A quick photometric reduction shows that
the OT has a magnitude of V=25.4 +/- 0.1 and the galaxy has
V=24.3 +/- 0.15. The total integrated magnitude of the galaxy
and OT is therefore V~24, which agrees with Palomar 5-m observations
taken approximately 12 hours before the HST observations, and
which will be reported in a succeeding GCN. No correction
to the STIS magnitude has yet been made to take into account
the colors of the objects, which could change the estimated
magnitudes from the broad STIS clear filter by ~0.1 mag.
The faint magnitude of the OT suggests that it may be declining
more rapidly than the earlier power-law would predict, as
suggested by the MDM group in GCN 248.
The probable host galaxy is itself composed of several irregular
pieces, extended over a region more than 1" across. The major
fraction of the light in the host is to the north of the OT, thus
agreeing with the probable extension reported by Djorgovski et
al. in GCN 243.
A gif image as well as the reduced FITS files will be posted
by 16:00 EST today (9 February 1999) on
http://www.stsci.edu/~fruchter/GRB/990123
We welcome the use of the reduced FITS image by others;
however, we ask that those who do use this image cite
this GCN, or a formal publication that may succeed it
(the bibliographic reference of which would be available
on the above web page).
GCN Circular 254
Subject
For Immediate Posting to GCN - HST Data GRB 990123 Available
Date
1999-02-09T18:07:15Z (27 years ago)
From
Steven Beckwith at STScI <svwb@stsci.edu>
HST Images of GRB 990123 Now Publicly Available
The Space Telescope Science Institute is pleased to announce that recent
observations of GRB 990123 are now available in the HST Data Archive. The
program ID is 8394. The three orbits of STIS CCD imaging were done as a
Director's Discretionary Program as a service to the astronomical community,
in response to suggestions by Fruchter, Kulkarni, and others. The data can
also be found in the archive's anonymous ftp area,
ftp://archive.stsci.edu/pub/misc/grb/GRB990123/
and gzipped versions of the same fits files are also available in the
compressed/ subdirectory.
[GCN OP NOTE: I deleted the HTML-version duplicate of the circular
that was attached in the original submitted/distributed circular.]
GCN Circular 252
Subject
GRB 990123: BVRI standards in the field
Date
1999-02-08T06:29:35Z (27 years ago)
From
Ram Sagar at UPSO <sagar@upso.ernet.in>
Nilakshi, R.K.S. Yadav, V. Mohan, A.K. Pandey and R.Sagar of U.P. State
Observatory, Manora Peak, Nainital, India report:
We have determined the Johnson BV and Cousins RI CCD magnitudes of 18 objects
in the field of GRB 990123 with the 104-cm Sampurnanand telescope of
the U.P. State Observatory, Manora Peak, Nainital under good photometric
sky conditions. The photometric standards present in the field of open
star cluster M67 have been used for calibration. The BVRI standard
magnitudes of these objects alongwith RA, DEC (J2000) and DAOPHOT
photometric errors prefixed with S are given below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Object RA Dec
h m s o ' '' V SV B-V S(B-V) V-R S(V-R) V-I S(V-I)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 15 25 27.0 44 46 23.2 14.84 0.00 0.57 0.00 0.32 0.00 0.58 0.00
2 15 25 36.5 44 44 37.6 15.47 0.00 0.63 0.01 0.36 0.01 0.67 0.01
3 15 25 11.8 44 46 2.1 15.96 0.00 0.64 0.00 0.41 0.01 0.78 0.01
4 15 25 21.1 44 46 46.9 16.28 0.00 0.67 0.00 0.39 0.00 0.71 0.01
5 15 25 38.6 44 43 20.3 16.72 0.00 0.60 0.01 0.32 0.01 0.63 0.01
6 15 25 21.7 44 46 52.7 16.80 0.00 1.35 0.01 0.82 0.00 1.54 0.01
7 15 25 38.8 44 44 30.1 17.65 0.06 1.29 0.07 0.83 0.08 1.34 0.08
8 15 25 17.9 44 46 29.5 18.10 0.01 1.13 0.01 0.66 0.01 1.17 0.01
9 15 25 39.1 44 44 46.1 18.48 0.05 1.32 0.07 0.67 0.08 1.25 0.07
10 15 25 19.6 44 47 53.0 18.66 0.01 1.45 0.02 0.86 0.01 1.64 0.01
11 15 25 19.3 44 45 58.1 18.72 0.01 0.47 0.01 -------- 0.53 0.02
12 15 25 15.6 44 45 5.6 18.96 0.03 0.87 0.04 0.53 0.04 0.98 0.05
13 15 25 32.7 44 44 29.9 19.01 0.01 0.53 0.02 0.37 0.01 0.69 0.02
14 15 25 25.3 44 45 24.7 19.16 0.05 1.36 0.07 0.70 0.07 1.23 0.07
15 15 25 16.4 44 47 28.4 19.65 0.02 1.39 0.04 0.88 0.02 1.71 0.03
16 15 25 13.8 44 44 50.1 19.87 0.03 0.43 0.04 0.27 0.03 0.34 0.06
17 15 25 26.6 44 43 55.3 20.14 0.03 1.06 0.06 0.80 0.03 1.23 0.04
18 15 25 27.5 44 44 43.6 20.31 0.03 0.48 0.05 0.40 0.03 0.43 0.09
--------------------------------------------------------------------
At the Web site http://www.rri.res.in/grb990123/ the manuscript dealing
with the above data are available. The title of the paper is " BVRI CCD
photometric standards in the field of GRB 990123". It has been accepted
for publication in the Bull. Astron. Soc. India.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 251
Subject
GRB 990123: Updated Keck Spectroscopy Results
Date
1999-02-05T02:31:18Z (27 years ago)
From
George Djorgovski at Caltech/Palomar <george@oracle.caltech.edu>
GRB 990123: Updated Keck Spectroscopy Results
S. G. Djorgovski, S. R. Kulkarni (CIT), G. D. Illingworth (UCSC),
D. D. Kelson (DTM), J. S. Bloom, S. C. Odewahn, R. R. Gal (CIT),
M. Franx (Leiden), P. van Dokkum (Groningen), D. Magee (UCSC), and
D. A. Frail (NRAO) note on behalf of the Caltech-UC-CARA-NRAO
collaboration:
Our re-reduction of the Keck spectrum of the optical transient associated
with GRB 990123 (Kelson et al., IAUC 7096) gives the following results:
We detect 12 (13) absorption lines in the spectrum of the OT, as follows:
W_obs,air W_rest,vac z Line ID
4843.74 1862.78 1.6010 Al III
5267.29 2026.14 1.6004 Zn II
5361.77 2062.23 1.6007 Cr II | blend
5361.77 2062.66 1.6002 Zn II |
5877.17 2260.78 1.6003 Fe II
6096.14 2344.21 1.6012 Fe II
6173.87 2373.73 1.6016 Fe II
6195.29 2382.76 1.6008 Fe II
6725.75 2586.64 1.6009 Fe II
6759.94 2600.18 1.6005 Fe II
7269.47 2796.35 1.6003 Mg II
7289.49 2803.53 1.6008 Mg II
7416.97 2852.97 1.6005 Mg I
The mean redshift is 1.6004 +- 0.0005 (random) +- 0.0005 (systematic).
This agrees to within the quoted error with the new determination of
the absorber redshift by Hjorth et al. (GCN 249).
We note the remarkably small velocity dispersion implied by these data,
less than about 60 km/s in the restframe, suggesting that the lines arise
from a single subgalactic-size cloud (which of course may be a part of the
host galaxy's ISM), rather than from an ansamble of clouds moving within
the potential well of a normal, massive galaxy. It is also possible that
the GRB host is a dwarf galaxy, in which case the object detected near the
line of sight both in the K band (Djorgovski et al., GCN 243) and in the
R band (Yadigaroglu and Halpern, GCN 248) may be a foreground galaxy.
No other convincing absorption systems, and no emission lines are detected
in these data, in the useful wavelength range of approximately 4700 to 9000
Angstroms. We do not detect Ca II H+K absorption, nor any other common
absorption lines, e.g., Na D, nor any common emission lines (e.g., [O II]
3727, H alpha, H beta, etc.) from either of the two absorption systems
originally proposed by Hjorth et al. (GCN 219).
We have also measured the redshift of the galaxy approximately 10 arcsec
west of the OT. From 4 relatively "clean" lines, Ca II H+K, H beta, and
H alpha, we derive for its redshift z = 0.2783 +- 0.0005. From 4 blended
lines, CH G-band 4300, Mg I 5173+5184, Fe I + Ca I 5267, and Na D 5893,
we derive z = 0.278 +- 0.001, again in an excellent agreement with Hjorth
et al. (GCN 249). No absorption or emission lines corresponding to this
redshift are seen in the spectrum of the OT.
This report may be cited.
GCN Circular 249
Subject
GRB 990123 NOT Spectrum Update
Date
1999-02-03T22:46:15Z (27 years ago)
From
Jens Hjorth at U.Copenhagen <jens@astro.ku.dk>
GRB 990123 NOT Spectrum Update
J. Hjorth (Copenhagen), M. I. Andersen (NOT), H. Pedersen (Copenhagen),
M. R. Zapatero-Osorio (IAC), E. Perez (IAA) and
A. J. Castro Tirado (LAEFF, IAA) report:
"We have conducted an improved analysis of the NOT spectra reported in
GCN #219. We detect several absorption lines in addition to the ones found
in the preliminary analysis, including Al III (185.5 and 186.3 nm). The
suggested assignment of two significant absorption lines with Zn II (202.6
and 206.3 nm) is uncertain. The resulting updated redshift is 1.598 +- 0.001.
The detection of an emission line associated with a system at z = 0.286 is not
confirmed. This considerably reduces the significance of the proposed line
system at z = 0.286. The significance of the line system at z = 0.21 is
unchanged and its reality remains uncertain. These findings are consistent
with the Keck results (IAUC #7096; GCN #223; GCN #235). The orientation of the
slit during the observations was along the parallactic angle (roughly E-W) and
covered the galaxy ~10" to the W of GRB 990123. The redshift of this galaxy is
0.278 +- 0.001 based on Ca II K and H (393.3 nm and 396.9 nm), G band
(400.3 nm) and Mgb (517.4 nm)."
GCN Circular 248
Subject
GRB990123, Optical observation
Date
1999-02-03T20:02:38Z (27 years ago)
From
Jules Halpern at Columbia U. <jules@astro.columbia.edu>
I. A. Yadigaroglu & J. P. Halpern (Columbia U.)
report on behalf of the MDM Observatory GRB follow-up team:
"We imaged the field of GRB 990123 in the R band on Feb. 3.54 UT using
the MDM Observatory 2.4m telescope. A total of 60 minutes exposure was
obtained in seeing of 1.2 arcsec. An object is detected at magnitude
R = 23.9 +/- 0.25 (referenced to the comparison star of GCN #207).
However, its position is approximately 0.6 arcsec north of the previous
position. The new position is (J2000) RA 15:25:30.343, Dec +44:45:59.86,
whereas the position on Jan. 30.52 was (J2000) RA 15:25:30.330,
Dec +44:45:59.27. These positions are measured with respect to the
same set of comparison stars, and they each have a statistical uncertainty
of 0.3 arcseconds in radius, but negligible systematic difference.
A possible extension in a Jan. 27 K-band image 0.5 arcsec to the north
of the OT was described by Djorgovski et al. (GCN #243). Our new R-band
image is consistent with that report.
The optical transient has faded at an accelerated rate since our last
reported observation on Jan. 30.52 (GCN #242). A continuation of the
alpha_r = -1.13 decay (Bloom et al. GCN #240) would have predicted an
R magnitude of 23.47 on Feb. 3.54. Since the position of the optical
centroid has shifted, we conclude that our measured R = 23.9 represents
an upper limit to the magnitude of both the OT and any coincident galaxy,
and that we are beginning to detect either an intervening galaxy or
the host galaxy of the burst. We note that the accelerated decay of
the OT could be an indication that the cooling frequency has passed below
the optical band, or that a jet which initially was highly collimated
toward us has begun to spread. An alternative interpretation in which
the initial OT has disappeared, and at the same time been replaced by
a fainter lensed component, seems less likely.
The new MDM image will be posted in the near future at
http://cba.phys.columbia.edu/grb/
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 247
Subject
GRB990123, is the "radio flare" due to an inhomogeneous medium?
Date
1999-02-03T18:17:17Z (27 years ago)
From
Xiangdong Shi at UCSD <shi@maroonbell.ucsd.edu>
Xiangdong Shi and Geza Gyuk (UC, San Diego):
In GCN#211,239 S. R. Kulkarni and D. A. Frail reported radio observations
of GRB990123, which show a "radio flare" on Jan. 24. GRB990123 appears
otherwise to be radio-quiet as of yet (GCN#200,212,239). We suggest the
possibility that this "flare" resulted from the GRB external shock running
into a cloud off line-of-sight. This section of the shock was decelerated
efficiently and its sychrotron frequency quickly fell into the range of
radio waves. This inhomogeneity of the medium may explain the abruptness
and shortness of the radio emission. The "flares" in other wavelengths
were brief and might also have been buried in the main afterglow.
We speculate that the cloud may have been composed of prior ejecta from
the gamma-ray burst progenitor. If there are still other nearby clouds, it
will be interesting to see whether the "flares" recur.
One implication of this hypothesis, if it is true, is that the GRB990123
is not likely to be strongly beamed (>10). Its intrinsic energy output
would in turn be indeed huge.
This message is citable.
GCN Circular 246
Subject
GRB 990123: Publicly available reduced HST images
Date
1999-02-03T15:47:41Z (27 years ago)
From
Andrew S. Fruchter at STScI <fruchter@stsci.edu>
Andrew Fruchter, on behalf of the HST GRB Collaboration, reports:
As the Director of STScI, Steven Beckwith, has announced in GCN 245,
service observations of GRB 990123 by HST using the STIS CCD will be
released to the community immediately upon their having been
processed through the standard HST data pipeline and fully ingested
by the HST Archive. However, the standard data pipeline will
not combine the 6 separate dither pointings, nor do a complete removal
of the hot pixels and cosmic rays.
Therefore, because of the great community interest in these
observations, the HST GRB Collaboration (whose time begins again
with Cycle 8) plans to fully reduce the data, and make the resulting
FITS images publicly available to the community via the web within
a day of the release of the data by the HST Archive (the wait may
be significantly less, depending upon the timing of the release
of the data from the archive). A GCN containing information on how
to retrieve the fully reduced images will be sent as soon as they are
available.
GCN Circular 245
Subject
GRB990123, Upcoming HST Service Observations
Date
1999-02-03T15:03:58Z (27 years ago)
From
Steven Beckwith at STScI <svwb@stsci.edu>
Steven Beckwith on behalf of STScI reports:
Owing to world-wide interest in GRB 990123, the Space Telescope
Science Institute will carry out imaging observations with the
HST STIS \ CCD 50CCD (clear filter), dithered, using 3 orbits of Director's
Discretionary Time as a service to the community. The observations are
scheduled to start Monday, 8 February at 23:06:54 UT, and finish Tuesday,
9 February, 03:21:43 UT. In the spirit of a cooperative multiwavelength
attempt to better identify and understand the nature of gamma-ray bursts,
the HST data will be publicly available with no proprietary period
immediately upon placement into the HST Data Archive, within a day or two
of the observations. When we know the exact time of placement in the
Archive, we will post it.
GCN Circular 244
Subject
GRB990123, 15-GHz limits
Date
1999-02-01T22:48:20Z (27 years ago)
From
Guy Pooley at MRAO, Cambridge, UK <ggp1@cam.ac.uk>
Guy Pooley, MRAO, University of Cambridge, reports the following:
Five observations of the field of GRB990123 have been made
with the Ryle Telescope, Cambridge UK at 15 GHz. No significant detection
was made. This is a summary:
date UT S sigma
-- microJy --
990125 0120-1116 160 180
990126 0116-1140 -12 180
990129 0104-0727 -197 200
990130 0738-1122 106 420
990131 0734-1119 48 300
GCN Circular 243
Subject
GRB 990123: New Constraints on Possible Foreground Galaxies
Date
1999-02-01T15:21:54Z (27 years ago)
From
George Djorgovski at Caltech/Palomar <george@oracle.caltech.edu>
GRB 990123: New Constraints on Possible Foreground Galaxies
S. G. Djorgovski, S. R. Kulkarni, J. S. Bloom, C. Koresko, R. R. Gal,
S. C. Odewahn (Caltech), M. A. Malkan, I. S. McLean (UCLA), H. I. Teplitz
(GSFC), D. Koerner (U. Penn.), D. Kirkpatrick (IPAC), and D. A. Frail (NRAO),
report on behalf of the Caltech-UC-NRAO-CARA GRB collaboration:
We performed a new differential astrometry between the Palomar discovery
images of the optical transient (OT) associated with GRB 990123 (GCN 201,
GCN 205) and the DPOSS F (red) plate containing the field. The results
indicate that the apparent foreground galaxy near the OT position (GCN 201,
GCN 206, GCN 207) is offset by 2.4 arcsec to the N and 1.0 arcsec to the E
of the OT, with the estimated errors of 0.13 arcsec (systematic) + 0.3 arcsec
(random) in each coordinate. As we noted before, at R ~ 21.5 mag this
object corresponds to approximately 2-sigma detection on the plate scan.
We detect no objects down to a limiting magnitude K ~ 23 in this location
in the stack of deep K-band images obtained at the Keck-I telescope on 24
and 27 January 1999 UT (GCN 240). The implied limiting color is so blue
that we can exclude even the most actively star-forming galaxies. We thus
conclude that the sky survey detection was spurious. This is in a complete
agreement with the findings by Yadigaroglu et al. (GCN 242) in the R band.
This leaves open the question of the identification of galaxies responsible
for the absorption systems at z = 0.286 and z = 0.210 reported by Hjorth
et al. (GCN 219), as well as the z = 1.60 absorption system itself (Kelson
et al., IAUC 7096; and GCN 219).
Using the best-fit R-band light curve power-law slope alpha = -1.13 +/- 0.03
(GCN 208, GCN 240) normalized to the K-band detection from 24 January 1999,
we estimate the maximum allowed contribution to the observed K-band light
in our measurements from 27 and 28 January 1999 UT from any underlying galaxy
(either the host and/or the foreground absorbers). We obtain K > 22 mag for
any such objects.
However, in our best-seeing (FWHM ~ 0.5 arcsec) images, from 27 January 1999
UT, we detect a faint, galaxy-like extension to the N of the OT, with an
apparent center about 0.5 arcsec from the OT itself. Its rough estimated
magnitude is in the range of K ~ 22 to 23 mag, in agreement with the limits
derived from the light curve analysis.
Pending an independent confirmation of this detection, this object may be
either a foreground dwarf galaxy responsible for one of the absorption
systems reported by Hjorth et al., or a highly luminous host of the GRB
itself (possibly responsible for the absorption system at z=1.6).
While there is no clear observational evidence for a strong gravitational
lensing of this burst, the possibility remains open, and the presence of
foreground galaxies along the line of sight suggests that some lensing
magnification must be taking place (regardless of the extraordinary apparent
energetics of this burst). Forthcoming observations from the Keck and the
HST should clarify the situation.
This report is citeable.
GCN Circular 242
Subject
GRB990123 Optical Observations
Date
1999-02-01T02:19:38Z (27 years ago)
From
Jules Halpern at Columbia U. <jules@astro.columbia.edu>
I. A. Yadigaroglu, J. P. Halpern, R. Uglesich, & J. Kemp (Columbia U.)
report on behalf of the MDM Observatory GRB follow-up team:
"We imaged the field of GRB 990123 in the R band on Jan. 30.52 using the
MDM Observatory 2.4m telescope. A total of 40 minutes exposure was
obtained in seeing of 0.9-1.0 arcsec. The optical transient is clearly
detected at magnitude R = 23.01 +/- 0.24 (referenced to the comparison
star of GCN #207, assuming r - R = 0.4). An independent calibration
using a Landolt standard also gives a consistent magnitude. The OT
position, measured with respect to the USNO-A2.0 reference system,
is (J2000) RA 15:25:30.34, Dec +44:45:59.2 with an uncertainty of
0.3 arcseconds in radius. This position is consistent with that of the
original detection of the OT (GCN #206). The temporal power-law decay
slope connecting our observation to the first Palomar detection is
alpha_r = -1.15 +/- 0.07, consistent with all previous observations,
which gave alpha_r = -1.13 +/- 0.03 (GCN #240).
Thus, the OT appears to be unresolved, at a fixed position, and following
a power-law decay in time.
However, we see no object corresponding to a suggested intervening
galaxy that was estimated to lie 1.8 arcsec north of the OT (GCN #206).
In fact, there is no other object on our image within 5 arcsec of the
OT, to a limiting magnitude of approximately R = 24. Since this galaxy
was only reported to be seen marginally on one POSS II red plate with
R = 21.5 +/- 0.5 (GCN #213), we conclude that it probably does not
exist. If true, this eliminates one of the arguments for hypothesizing
that the burst is lensed."
The MDM image will be posted in the near future at
http://cba.phys.columbia.edu/grb/
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 241
Subject
GRB990123, Probability of gravitational lensing
Date
1999-01-31T02:31:33Z (27 years ago)
From
Brad Schaefer at Yale U <brad@grb2.physics.yale.edu>
Bradley E. Schaefer (Yale):
In the last few days, the GCN has had several discussions about the
possibility that GRB990123 might be lensed with a high amplification.
This note is to provide balance and point out several problems with this
possibility. In particular, the arguments suggest that there will be no
repeat lens events on short (or long) time scales.
(1) The idea of GRB990123 lensing has weak motivation.
The motivation that GRB990123 is lensed is (A) to reduce the
deduced isotropic-equivalent energy (2.3x10^54 erg) to a level that can be
readily explained by models, (B) to account for the lack of previous
optical flash detection by LOTIS and ROTSE [GCN #216], (C) to account for
GRB970627 as a lensed image [GCN #234], and (D) to explain the large radio
variability [GCN #239].
(A) To claim that GRB990123 is too energetic requires a knowledge
of the burst energy budget, whereas no such answer is known.
Nevertheless, within current reasonable models (e.g., collapsars, merging
compact objects) the typical gamma ray energies range up to ~10^52 ergs.
[This forces the lens amplification, A, to be >200 or so.] Any such
argument would already require that GRB971214 [3x10^53 erg; Kulkarni et
al. 1998, Nature, 393, 35] and GRB980703 [2x10^53 erg; GCN #139, GCN #143]
must also be lensed with large amplitude. The likelihood of three high
amplitude lenses among the 17 SAX bursts is close to zero.
(B) The optical flash luminosity is indeed large [it would appear
brighter than our Sun at a distance of 1 kpc], but we have no idea of what
is expected, so with A=200 the source still has M~-30.7 and this is still
astounding. More to the point, no previous search would have detected an
optical flash with the E_gamma/E_opt ratio for GRB990123 (i.e., V~9 [GCN
#205] for a gamma ray fluence of 5.1x10^-4 erg cm^-2 [GCN #224]). For
example, the highest fluence event seen by GROCSE is 1.9x10^-5 erg cm^-2
with an optical limit of 8.1 mag [H. S. Park et al. 1997, ApJ, 490, 99].
For LOTIS, the strictest limit comes from GRB970223 with a fluence of
4.8x10^-5 erg cm^-2 and an optical limit of 11.0 mag [H. S. Park et al.
1997, ApJLett, 490, L21]. So there are no missing-optical-flashes to
motivate a lens suggestion.
(C) For GRB970627 to be a lensed image, it must have the same
light curve, spectrum, and position as GRB990123. [Microlensing could
conceivably make mild changes in the light curve or spectrum by imaging
different portions of the fireball, but then the time delay between images
cannot be 1.5 years without simultaneously invoking high amplitude
microlensing on top of high amplitude macrolensing.] The two bursts have
peak-to-peak times of 12s and 17s, have greatly different peak intensity
ratios, have greatly different peak shapes, and GRB970627 lacks the late
time flux prominent in GRB990123. The two bursts have greatly different
hardness ratio in BATSE channels 1, 2, and 3, with H21 equal 1.37 versus
0.56 and H32 equal 5.83 versus 1.14
[http://www.batse.msfc.nasa.gov/data/grb/catalog/flux.html]. The
GRB990123 OT position is 4.23 degrees away from the IPN annulus for
GRB970627 which has a 3-sigma width of 0.065 degrees [GCN #235]. Thus,
GRB970627 is certainly not a lensed image of GRB990123.
(D) The radio observations of GRB990123 to date show >10X
variations in flux [GCN #239], but this is not qualitatively different
from the 4X variations already known from GRB scintillation [e.g., Frail
et al. 1997, Nature, 389, 261]. Nevertheless, GCN #239 suggests that
normal variation of a GRB cannot account for this variation, and instead
propose that the radio detection is of an earlier lensed image of the same
GRB. However, this alternative suggestion has exactly the same problem as
what it was trying to replace, since then the earlier lensed image is
required to vary by >10X. That is, lensing does not solve the posed
problem. So logically, there is no motivation to invoke lensing.
(2) A GRB990123 lensing event is now extremely improbable.
Within the lensing hypothesis, for simple lenses, the time delay
between images will scale as the mass of the lens, with typical delays of
250 seconds for a 10^9 solar mass lens or 7 hours for a 10^11 solar mass
lens [see E. Turner et al. 1984, ApJ, 284, 1]. So for the simple case,
there can be no lensed event in the future. For more complex lenses, GCN
#236 points out that the time delay between the two brightest and roughly
equal images will be from tens of seconds to a fraction of a day. In
either case, the lack of a comparable sized lens argues strongly that
there will be no more images arriving in the future and that there has
been no lensing at all.
The fraction of quasars that are lensed with moderate
amplification is ~10^-3. The fraction of GRBs with multiple images is
<10^-3 (G. Marani 1998, Thesis, George Mason). For a GRB distance
of z=1.6, the expected lensing fraction is ~2x10^-3
(D. Holz et al. 1999, ApJ, 510, 54). [A correction for amplification bias
is needed for this theoretical estimate, but this will not be large due to
the turn over in the LogN-LogP curve.] So, for GRBs with A>~2 we expect
the lensing fraction to be ~10^-3. The lensing probability scales as
A^-2. For the 17 SAX bursts, we then expect a final probability of
<2x10^-6 that any burst will be amplified as much as required. This
probability calculation suggests strongly that GRB990123 is not lensed and
thus will not have future lensing events on short or long time scales.
(3) Beaming is a better model.
Observationally, we know that the burst emission is collimated (to
allow the escape of GeV photons) and that most of burst emission is coming
from very small angular beams (e.g., B. Schaefer & K. C. Walker 1998,
ApJLett, 511, in press; ASTRO-PH/9810271; ASTRO-PH/9802200).
Theoretically, recent models produce small cones of emission, for example
S. Woosley suggests a beaming factor of 0.015 while M. Rees suggests it
can be as low as 10^-4 [Rome GRB Conf.]. So we have every reason to
expect significant beaming factors. This expectation will immediately
lower the burst energy requirements and eliminate the motivation for a
GRB990123 lens. Why invoke an extremely improbable solution with no
positive evidence when everyone already knows that beaming solves the
problem and must be present.
GCN Circular 240
Subject
GRB 990123: Detection of the IR Transient, and the Light Curve Fits
Date
1999-01-29T04:31:21Z (27 years ago)
From
George Djorgovski at Caltech/Palomar <george@oracle.caltech.edu>
GRB 990123: Detection of the IR Transient, and the Light Curve Fits
J. S. Bloom, C. Koresko, S. R. Kulkarni, S. G. Djorgovski, R. R. Gal,
and S. C. Odewahn, Caltech,
H. I. Teplitz, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center,
D. Koerner, Univ. of Pennsylvania,
D. Kirkpatrick, Infrared Processing and Analysis Center,
M. A. Malkan, and I. S. McLean, Univ. of California, LA,
D. A. Frail, National Radio Astronomy Observatory,
report on behalf of the Caltech-CARA-NRAO GRB collaboration:
"The field of the optical transient of GRB 990123 (GCN 201) was observed
with the Near Infra-red Camera (NIRC) on the Keck I telescope on
24 January 1999 UT by Koerner and Kirkpatrick. We report the discovery
of the IR counterpart of the afterglow with K = 18.3 +/- 0.03 mag (epoch
24.6356 Jan 1999 UT). The same field was observed by Malkan, Teplitz and
McLean on the nights of January 27.65 and 28.55 UT, and in both instances
the object was readily detected. Fitting a power law to the three
magnitudes yields a power law exponent of alpha_K= -1.14 +/- 0.08.
Separately, we have carried out a program of recalibrating Gunn r and R
band magnitudes reported by others via the GCN. We used those measurements
which reported the magnitude of a reference star (or stars) and have put all
the measurements on a common photometric system. A fit to these recalibrated
magnitudes yields a power law slope, alpha_r = -1.13 +/- 0.03. Within
errors, the slope of the K band data is fully consistent with that obtained
from the r/R band data. We adopt a mean alpha of -1.13.
The color difference between the decaying r and K fluxes is (r-K) = 2.75 mag.
Converting the magnitudes to flux this color difference corresponds to
beta = -0.82, where f_nu = const * nu^beta. The ratio alpha/beta = 1.38.
This suggests that the cooling frequency is higher than the central frequency
of the r band (about 4x10^14 Hz) even two days after the burst. We urge
continued monitoring of the optical transient in the r/R band with the view
of detecting the passage of the cooling break.
In contrast to the light curves measured in the r and K bands, the light
curve in the B band (calibrated on a uniform photometric system) is not well
described by a power law. The origin of this discrepancy is as yet unclear.
Further observations are in progress.
This report is citeable."
GCN Circular 239
Subject
GRB 990123: Continued Radio Observations
Date
1999-01-29T04:22:52Z (27 years ago)
From
Shri Kulkarni at Caltech <srk@astro.caltech.edu>
S. R. Kulkarni (Caltech) and D. A. Frail (NRAO) report on behalf
of the Caltech-NRAO-CARA gamma-ray burst collaboration the following.
"We have continued monitoring the error box of GRB 990123
(GCN #202) with the Very Large Array (VLA). All our observations
were conducted in the 8.46-GHz band. At the position of the
optical transient we obtain the following fluxes:
Here is a summary of all the X-band observations to date.
Jan 23: <68 microJy (GCN #200)
Jan 24: 260 microJy (GCN #211)
Jan 26: <78 microJy
Jan 27: <50 microJy
Jan 28: <50 microJy
Note: The upper limits are indicated by "<" and are 2-sigma.
To summarize, the radio afterglow has been detected only once, on
January 24 1999. The detection was very secure being 8-sigma. The
source was seen in both intermediate frequency (IF) bands and in both
senses of polarization (R and L). In contrast, the average of the flux
for the period January 26-28 is <32 microJy.
This high degree of variability could be due to interstellar scattering
and scintillation (ISS). However, the factor of 10 variation in the
flux density requires rather extreme ISS. In addition, we expect the
source to be gradually rising with time. Thus the absence of the source
on three successive days is quite puzzling.
Discarding the ISS hypothesis, we have two choices. First, the radio
emission detected on January 24 is some kind of precursor event to the
main afterglow. Typically, the radio afterglow in the 8.46-GHz band
rises to the peak flux in about 10-20 days. We have little data about
the behavior of radio afterglow within a few days after the burst.
Thus it is difficult to accept or reject this hypothesis.
The alternative hypothesis is that the GRB is lensed (GCN #216). At
the present time, there is no firm evidence for lensing. However, the
lensing idea is economical in energetics. Likewise, the lensing
hypothesis offers a simpler alternative to the curious phenomenon
discussed above. As discussed by various people (S. Mao GCN#236, R.
Narayan, pers. comm.) a robust expectation of strong lensing is that
we should first see the faint image "B1" (in the terminology of GCN
#236). In this framework, we identify the radio source of Jan 24th with
the radio afterglow of the B1 component. If this interpretation is
correct then the radio afterglow of the brighter components B2 and B3
should become visible in in the next few weeks. We do not possess
sufficient astrometric accuracy to see if the reported (GCN #201)
optical afterglow (which is presumably due to B1+B2) and the radio
afterglow are offset on the sky. Indeed, the excellent agreement (0.5
arcsec) between the positions of the optical and the radio afterglow
places a limit of a delay of 30 days between components B1 and B2+B3.
Clearly, radio monitoring will refute or confirm this hypothesis.
This report is citeable."
GCN Circular 238
Subject
GRB990123, Preliminary Lens Search Results
Date
1999-01-28T21:35:38Z (27 years ago)
From
Robert Nemiroff at Michigan Tech. <nemiroff@mtu.edu>
R. J. Nemiroff (Michigan Tech.),
G. F. Marani (NRC/NASA), J. T. Bonnell (USRA/NASA),
J. P. Norris (NASA/GSFC), and C. A. Meegan (NASA/MSFC) report:
There is, as yet, no primary indication that GRB 990123 has undergone
any type of strong gravitational lensing.
Weak lensing: Most sources at z>1.6 will be either gravitationally
amplified or (more likely) de-amplified by >5% by inhomogeneities in
the gravitational field between the observer and the source (see, for
example, Holz et al. astro-ph/9804271).
Strong Lensing:
Galaxy lensing: There is, as yet, no primary indication that GRB 990123
is one of multiple macro-images created by an intervening galaxy lens.
In comparison with QSOs, it is not unusual for single image QSOs to be
found within 3 arcseconds of a low mass galaxy (e.g. Claeskens & Surdej
1998, A&A 335, 69) or for a single image QSO to have absorption lines.
As GRB 990123 was the brightest event ever detected with a measured
cosmological redshift, its macrolensing probability is high relative to
other GRBs and afterglows, but still, quite possibly, low in absolute
terms. The foreground galaxy near GRB 990123 is intriguing but not yet
defining. The "probability" now all hinges on the unknown masses and
mass distributions internal to foreground galaxies.
No other BATSE triggered GRB has been found that is consistent with a
lensing interpretation. Twenty-three BATSE GRBS have occurred in the
past three years within a 3-sigma error contour of GRB 990123. The
closest two in light curve shape were judged to be BATSE triggers 6279
and 6698. A preliminary visual inspection reveals none of them is a
close light-curve match to GRB 990123.
Millilensing: There is, as yet, no primary indication that GRB 990123
has undergone significant amplification by a compact mass on the
globular-cluster scale. The two main peaks in the GRB light curve do
not appear to be co-added replicas of a single light curve seperated by
major peak are significantly different (> 5 sigma, preliminary
analysis) in BATSE channels 1 and 4. Similarly, the ratios in peak
flux between the first major peak and the last peak are also
significantly different (> 5 sigma, preliminary analysis).
Microlensing: There is, as yet, no primary indication that GRB 990123
has undergone significant light curve distortion due to microlensing by
compact masses on the stellar mass scale. Microlensing at low optical
depths would create images separated in time by only microseconds
(Nemiroff 1994, ApJ 432, 478; Nemiroff 1998, ApJ 494, L173) to
milliseconds (Williams & Wijers 1997, MNRAS 286, L11), generally below
minimum time scale of BATSE GRB resolution (64-ms).
We encourage, however, continued attempts to recover secondary images
from any GRB or afterglow, including GRB 990123.
GCN Circular 237
Subject
GRB 990123: Correction to GCN 230 - C.A. Young added to author list
Date
1999-01-28T21:01:26Z (27 years ago)
From
Alanna Connors at UNH <aconnors@comptel.sr.unh.edu>
The name of C. A. Young, duty scientist at the time of CGRO-COMPTEL's
initial rapid (~10 minute) localization of GRB 990123, was inadvertently
left off the author list.
The correct attribution should be as follows:
"A. Connors, R. M. Kippen and C. A. Young, for the CGRO-COMPTEL Rapid
Burst Response collaboration; and S. Barthelmy and P. Butterworth, for
BACODINE/GCN, report the following:"
This note can be cited.
GCN Circular 236
Subject
On the Lensing Interpretation of GRB 990123
Date
1999-01-28T10:49:17Z (27 years ago)
From
Shude Mao at MPI,Garching <smao@ibm-2.MPA-Garching.MPG.DE>
Shude Mao (Max Planck Inst. for Astrophysics) reports:
Djorgovski et al. (GCN Circ. 216) suggested that GRB 990123 might be
highly magnified (A>10) by an intervening galaxy based on a variety of
arguments. A likely scenario is that the bursting source is very close to
a fold caustic. As a result, we have a PAIR of highly magnified images
(we call B2 and B3) plus other additional image(s).
If this scenario is correct, then from the lensing theory, three points
can be immediately made:
1. There must be a fainter burst that has arrived before GRB 990123. This
first burst (we call B1) would be offset from GRB 990123 by about ~2".
This expectation is valid no matter what the lens potential.
Notice that, in this scenario, all the optical and radio afterglows
we see now are the sum of the first-arriving burst B1 and GRB 990123.
High resolution imaging in the radio and in the optical (with HST)
may reveal the presence of B1.
The time interval and intensity ratio between B1
and GRB 990123 does depend on the model. A rough estimate
of the time delay is a few days to a month, and the intensity
ratio is around a few to a few tens. These predictions can be made
more precise when the astrometries and velocity dispersion of the
foreground galaxy are better known. The gamma-ray burst data archive
should be searched to see whether there was such a burst. A fourth
image (B4) much fainter than GRB 990123 may also appear after about a month.
2. The gamma-ray burst host galaxy, since it is extended, will be distorted
into a ring or arcs if the center of the host galaxy does not have
a significant offset from GRB 990123. Such features can be detected with
HST imaging (see also Turner, GCN 221). This expectation is independent
of the models.
3. The close pair of images should have roughly equal intensities.
The time delay between these two images depends strongly
on the magnification; a simple model shows that it can be between
tens of seconds to a fraction of a day. This close pair therefore
should have ALREADY left imprints on the after glow light curves.
The close pair should have an image splitting of about 0.05" to a
fraction of arcsecond; HST imaging will either provide a confirmation
or rule out this scenario.
If the time delay between the close pair can be as short as tens
of seconds, this raises an intriguing possibility: is GRB 990123
itself lensed? That is, GRB 990123 may be superposed by two bursts
coming from the close pair. These two bursts have a time lag
of about 15 seconds, producing the first and second peaks in
the light curve. It will be very interesting to check whether
the gamma-ray spectrum and light curve of GRB 990123 are consistent
with this superposition scenario. If this hypothesis is correct, then
the close pair should have an imaging splitting of ~0.05" and
each is magnified by a factor of about 100.
More information (including figures) can be found at
http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~smao/grb.html
This report may be cited.
[GCN OP NOTE: This Circular was received at 09:19 UT, but was delayed until
an entry in the distribution list was created.]
GCN Circular 235
Subject
Search for Potential Images of GRB 990123
Date
1999-01-27T21:46:09Z (27 years ago)
From
Kevin Hurley at UCBerkeley/SSL <khurley@sunspot.ssl.berkeley.edu>
K. Hurley, UC Berkeley Space Sciences Laboratory, on behalf of the
Ulysses GRB team, and C. Kouveliotou, Universities Space Research
Association, Marshall Space Flight Center, on behalf of the BATSE team,
report:
GRB 970627 (=BATSE Trigger #6279), suggested as a possible
gravitationally lensed counterpart to GRB 990123 (Rutledge and
Kulkarni, GCN 234), was detected by the Ulysses GRB instrument and
triangulated to an annulus centered at RA(2000)=153.491,
Decl.(2000)=26.188, with radius 67.841 degrees and 3 sigma width 0.065
degrees. This annulus intersects the one for GRB 990123 (GCN 222) at
two locations: around RA(2000)=84.055 degrees, Decl.(2000)=+08.531
degrees, and around RA(2000)=234.866 degrees, Decl.(2000)=+37.878
degrees. Neither error box, nor the annulus for GRB 970627, includes
the optical transient (GCN 206). (We note that the IPN annulus and the
BATSE error circle for GRB 970627 do not intersect, nor does the BATSE
error circle include the optical transient, but this is not unexpected,
given that the error circle is a 1 sigma location.) We conclude that
GRB 970627 is not the lensed counterpart of GRB 990123.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 234
Subject
Search for Potential Images of GRB 990123
Date
1999-01-27T20:27:44Z (27 years ago)
From
Robert Rutledge at Caltech <rutledge@srl.caltech.edu>
Search for Potential Images of GRB 990123
R. Rutledge and S. R. Kulkarni (CIT) note:
Djorgovski et al. (GCN #216) have suggested that GRB 990123 is lensed
by a foreground galaxy identified by Odewahn et al. (GCN #201) and
presumed to be at redshift 0.21 or 0.28 (Hjorth et al. GCN #219). The
basis of this argument is two fold: (1) the energetics of the GRB are
reduced, as lensing would provide strong amplification, and (2) the
foreground galaxy, due to its placement and likely mass, must result
in some amount of lensing of a background object at the position of
the optical transient.
A consequence of this lensing hypothesis is image splitting. The same
burst would arrive at different times, with the time difference
proportional to the image separation (e.g., Turner et al. GCN #221).
Motivated by these considerations we have looked into the BATSE
catalog to see if there are GRBs in the general vicinity of the
location of GRB 990123 (Piro et al, GCN #199) and with close to
identical profile. The two profiles need not be exactly identical
since microlensing combined with source expansion can lead to changes
in profile.
Within a 4-sigma error radius consistent with the GRB 990123 OT
transient position, we find two double-peaked GRBs. In one of these
(GRB 970627, BATSE Trigger #6279), the peaks are similar in separation
and peak-width ratio to GRB 990123, although the peak intensity ratio
is different by about 60+/-20%. In addition, there is excess emission
in GRB 990123 following the two peaks, which is not observed from GRB
970627. However, based on the characteristics of intensity profiles,
it is possible that GRB 970627 and GRB 990123 are lensed images of the
same GRB event.
We estimate that the chance probability of a similar profile GRB being
consistent in position is about 2%, based on the identification of 8
similar GRB intensity profiles among the approximately 2000 GRBs in
the BATSE catalog. If we include in this statistic GRBs with a more
dissimilar intensity profile, the chance probability increases. We
find 24 double-peaked GRBs (of 2000 in the BATSE Catalog) which are
comparable in peak separation (15-25 seconds) but are still dissimilar
to GRB 990123, resulting in a chance probability of 6.4%. A
comparison between the light curves of these two GRBs is available at
http://www.srl.caltech.edu/personnel/rutledge/0123/bursts.html.
If GRB 970627 is indeed a lensed image of GRB 990123, then to explain
the very long time delay between the two images (1.5 years), the
positional splitting must be several arcseconds in size and would most
certainly require multiple lenses or a cluster.
This message may be cited.
GCN Circular 233
Subject
GRB990123, Optical BVRI Observations
Date
1999-01-27T19:24:25Z (27 years ago)
From
Elena Pian at ITESRE-CNR,Bologna <pian@tesre.bo.cnr.it>
GRB 990123 BVRI Photometry
N. Masetti, E. Palazzi, E. Pian, F. Frontera (ITESRE-CNR, Bologna), C.
Bartolini, A. Guarnieri, A. Piccioni (Astronomy Dept., Univ. Bologna),
G. Valentini (Teramo Astr. Obs.) and E. Costa (IAS-CNR) report:
"We have imaged the field of GRB990123 with the Bologna Astronomical
Observatory 1.5m telescope equipped with BFOSC, using Johnson B and V, and
Cousins R and I filters in January 24-26.
Calibrations were done referring to GCN 206 for the B image, to GCN 204
for the R image, and using the standard star BD+252534 (Taylor et al.
1989, AJ 97, 1798) for the V and I images.
In the appended table the preliminary magnitudes of the optical transient
(GCN 201) are reported along with the observation dates.
Power-law fits to the R and V band data yield temporal decay indices of
alpha = 1.20 +- 0.08 and alpha = 1.25 +- 0.16, respectively (errors are 1
sigma), with satisfactory chi square values. No indication is found of a
flattening of the light curve due to an underlying galaxy.
Suggestion of a slight flux increase is seen on January 25 in both R and V
bands, as opposed to the overall fading trend. This is however not
significant.
The BVRI spectral continuum of the optical transient in the first night
(average time of Jan 24.16), dereddened with E(B-V) = 0.016 (GCN 207), has
a power-law shape (f_nu = k*nu^{-beta}) with best-fit slope
beta = 1.1 +- 0.2 (1 sigma).
The BVRI light curves and the radio-to-X-ray spectral energy distribution
of the transient are also shown at the Web site
http://tonno.tesre.bo.cnr.it/~masetti/grb990123.html
Multiwavelength observations, particularly in the near-infrared and
millimetric bands, are needed and urged.
Date (UT) mag error band
-----------------------------------
1998 Jan 24.122 19.36 0.20 I
24.142 19.79 0.10 R
24.164 19.97 0.16 V
24.194 20.64 0.07 B
24.216 19.92 0.10 R
25.138 20.91 0.10 R
25.159 20.77 0.10 R
25.181 21.01 0.20 V
25.203 20.93 0.20 V
26.154 21.77 0.16 V
26.154 21.56 0.10 R
This message can be cited."
GCN Circular 232
Subject
GRB 990123: near-infrared observations.
Date
1999-01-27T14:51:12Z (27 years ago)
From
Angelo Antonelli at Obs. Astro. di Roma <angelo@quasar.mporzio.astro.it>
L.A. Antonelli, A. Di Paola, R.Speziali, Osservatorio Astronomico di
Roma, Italy, and G. Gandolfi, BeppoSAX Scientific Operation Center,
Italy, report on behalf of SWIRT Team and BeppoSAX Team:
"We observed the Optical Transient field of GRB 990123 in the J band
using the 1.1m AZT-24 telescope and the near-infrared
camera/spectrometer SWIRCAM at the Campo Imperatore Astronomical
Observatory operated by the Astronomical Observatory of Rome (O.A.R.).
On 25.22 (UT) January 1999, the OT field was observed for a total
exposure time of 2000 s reaching the limiting magnitude in the
J band of 19.5 +/- 0.3 mag .
On 26.12 (UT) January 1999 the field was re-observed for a total
exposure time of 3600 s reaching the limiting magnitude in the
J band of 19.3 +/- 0.3 mag. No source has been found in both
observations within the errorbox of the O.T. (IAUC 7094).
These observations provide an upper limit, in the J band, to the
infrared counterpart (if any) of GRB 990123 and on its behaviour.
This message may be cited."
[GCN OP NOTE (99/01/27 15:10 UT): Some of you on the GCN Circulars list
probably received this Circular twice. Due to a very low probability
occurance of e-mail deliver deamons timing, this notice got deposited
in the "import" queue of the Circulars processing deamon twice.]
GCN Circular 231
Subject
GRB990123, OSSE observations
Date
1999-01-27T09:57:44Z (27 years ago)
From
Steven M. Matz at Northwestern U/OSSE <s-matz@nwu.edu>
S. M. Matz (Northwestern University), G. H. Share, R. Murphy, and J. D.
Kurfess (Naval Research Lab) report on behalf of the OSSE team:
The OSSE instrument on board the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory detected
strong emission from GRB 990123 in its central detectors and in its
active NaI shields. While the burst was not in the detectors' field of
view, it was still detected to >3 MeV in two 16 s intervals. The rise
and first strong peak (at about trigger+25 s) are roughly (within 1--2
s) aligned at all energies. The low-energy (<100 keV) burst emission
appears to last significantly longer than the higher energy emission.
Detailed spectral analysis is underway; preliminary analysis indicates
that the average spectrum of the main burst can be well described above
0.8 MeV by a photon power law with an index of about -3.
Time histories from the OSSE central detectors in different energy
ranges from 50 keV to >3 MeV are posted on the OSSE burst web page
( http://www.astro.nwu.edu/astro/osse/bursts/ ) along with a preliminary
spectrum of the burst. Also available are a plot and raw data for the
high time resolution (16 ms) history of the first 60 s of the burst
from the triggered OSSE shield data (>100 keV).
This report may be cited.
GCN Circular 230
Subject
GRB 990123: Strong MeV CGRO-COMPTEL detection now posted on WWW
Date
1999-01-26T22:15:07Z (27 years ago)
From
Alanna Connors at UNH <aconnors@comptel.sr.unh.edu>
A. Connors and R. M. Kippen, for the CGRO-COMPTEL Rapid Burst Response
collaboration; and S. Barthelmy and P. Butterworth, for BACODINE/GCN,
report the following:
CGRO-COMPTEL observed GRB 990123 to be extremely bright in its ~MeV energy
range. The >0.7 MeV emission rose about 18 seconds after the initial BATSE
trigger at 9h 46m 56.12s U.T. and lasted about 46 seconds, for a 10 sigma
detection, despite its very large zenith angle (59 degrees). An initial
detection notice was sent about 10 minutes after burst onset. Improved
skymaps and light-curves for the full 0.2-30 MeV range have now been posted
at the CGRO-COMPTEL Rapid Burst Response web-site:
http://wwwgro.unh.edu/bursts
These are still considered preliminary as our standard energy calibration is
not yet complete.
This message can be cited.
GCN Circular 229
Subject
GRB990123: NIR Observation
Date
1999-01-26T19:56:17Z (27 years ago)
From
Angelo Antonelli at Obs. Astro. di Roma <angelo@quasar.mporzio.astro.it>
L.A. Antonelli, A. Di Paola, Osservatorio Astronomico di Roma,
G. Gandolfi (BeppoSAX Scientific Operation Center) report on
behalf of SWIRT Team and BeppoSAX Team:
"On 25.16 (UT) January 1999, we imaged the Optical Transient field
in the K band using the 1.1m AZT-24 telescope and the near-infrared
camera/spectrometer SWIRCAM at the Campo Imperatore Astronomical
Observatory (http://www.mporzio.astro.it/cimperatore/WWW/) operated
by the Astronomical Observatory of Rome (O.A.R.).
The 4'X4' field of view was exposed for 3300 s reaching the limiting
magnitude in the K band of 17.9 +/- 0.2 mag. No source has been found
within the errorbox of the O.T. (IAUC 7094). This observation provides
a more compelling upper limit in K band with respect to the previous
observation in the same band (GCN #214). The behaviour of the
source between the two observation, at this wavelenght, is unknown.
Further near infrared observations are in progress.
This message may be cited."
GCN Circular 228
Subject
GRB990123, ASCA X-ray observation of afterglow
Date
1999-01-26T15:17:19Z (27 years ago)
From
Toshio Murikami at ISAS <murakami@astro.isas.ac.jp>
T. Murakami, M. Ishida and T. Dotani, Institute of Space and
Astronautical Science, and A. Yoshida and N. Kawai, Institute of
Physical and Chemical Research, report:
The X-ray astronomy satellite ASCA has been observing the X-ray afterglow
of GRB990123 since January 25.688 (UT). The observation started about
55 hours after the burst, but the X-ray afterglow is still bright. ASCA
will continue observing the source until January 26.806 (UT). With only
one forth of the dataset down-linked at the tracking station, the flux
is about 1 x 10E-12 erg cmE-2 sE-1 in 2 to 10 keV assuming a power-law
with the photon index of -1.6.
GCN Circular 227
Subject
"GRB 990123: New BV Observations"
Date
1999-01-26T02:30:05Z (27 years ago)
From
Ram Sagar at UPSO <sagar@upso.ernet.in>
R.Sagar, A.K. Pandey, R.K.S. Yadav, Nilakshi and V. Mohan of U.P. State
Observatory, Manora Peak, Nainital, India report:
"We have observed the optical transient (GCN #201) of GRB
990123 (GCN #199) with the 104-cm telescope of the U.P. State Observatory,
Manora Peak, Nainital, India in Johnson B and Cousin R photometric
passband under good photometric sky conditions. We have calibrated the images
using photometric standards located in the field of open star cluster M67.
In each filter three images of 20 minutes are obtained and they are stcked to
improve signal to noise ratio of the optical transient.
We obtain the following magnitudes:
UT date filter mag err
Jan 24.90 R 21.25 0.1
Jan 24.99 B 22.05 0.2
The (B-R) colour of the OT becomes redder by about 0.2 mag compared to our
observations on Jan 23, 1999 (GCN #218).These results are preliminary
and more accurate results will be published later.
At the Web site http://www.rri.res.in/grb990123/ all the images taken
on the nights of Jan 23 and 24 are available. We have also taken
images during the night of 25/26 Jan 99 and will report the results later.
Sky conditions were good for photometric observations on the nights of
24/25 Jan 99 and 25/26 Jan 99 and we have observed the M67 field for
calibration purposes. Precise determination of the BVRI magnitudes of the stars
as well as of the OT in the field of the GRB990123 are in progress.
This message may be cited."
GCN Circular 226
Subject
GRB 990123 Optical Follow-Up
Date
1999-01-26T01:01:29Z (27 years ago)
From
Jin Zhu at Beijing Obs <grb@bac.pku.edu.cn>
GRB 990123 Optical Follow-Up
J. Zhu, J. S. Chen, and H. T. Zhang, on behalf of the Beijing Astronomical
Observatory GRB team report:
"We observed the GRB 990123 OT (GCN #202) around Jan. 25.9 with
BAO 0.6-m Schmidt telescope under good weather. One 40-min. exposure
was made with BATC band-i filter and the very weak source at RA=15:25:30.35,
Dec=44:45:59.4 (J2000) was detected near the detection limit of the image
which gives a magnitude of 21.3 +/- 0.3 (Jan 25.901) using the No. 1 and
No. 2 stars in GCN #204. Assuming a minimum decay slope of 1.18 (for the
OT) obtained from our previous observations (GCN #217), we conclude that
the source we detect here is probably the coincident galaxy found on
the digital POSS-II image by Odewahn et al. (GCN #201 and IAUC 7094).
This report may be cited."
GCN Circular 225
Subject
GRB 990123; Addendum to GCN 223
Date
1999-01-25T23:21:07Z (27 years ago)
From
Andrew S. Fruchter at STScI <fruchter@stsci.edu>