GRB 990806
GCN Circular 401
Subject
GRB990806 BeppoSAX follow up
Date
1999-08-10T17:47:32Z (26 years ago)
From
Filippo Frontera at ITESRE CNR <filippo@tesre.bo.cnr.it>
F. Frontera, Istituto TESRE, CNR, Bologna and University of
Ferrara, Italy; M. Capalbi, M.R. Daniele, A. Malizia, M. Perri, BeppoSAX
SDC, Rome, Italy; E. Montanari, University of Ferrara, Italy; M. R.
Daniele, A. Paolino, R. Ricci, G. Tarei, A. Tesseri, BeppoSAX SOC,
Rome, Italy; C. Pastor, M. Stornelli, SAX-OCC, Rome, Italy; E. Pian,
Istituto TESRE, CNR, Bologna, Italy; G. Gandolfi and L. Piro, IAS,
CNR, Rome, Italy, on behalf of a larger collaboration, report:
"The BeppoSAX Wide Field Camera error box of GRB990806 BeppoSAX MAIL n.
99/22 and GCN #392) was observed with the BeppoSAX Narrow Field
Instruments (NFI) starting about 8 hrs after the burst in the period Aug.
06.9267-08.6563 UT. Preliminary analysis of MECS2+3 data shows a
previously unknown X-ray source, 1SAX J0310.6-6806, located at RA =
03h10m35s, Dec = -68o06'35'' (equinox 2000.0), with an error radius of 1'.
This position is very close to the centroid of the WFC error box. During
the observation, the 1.4-10 keV source flux decreases by a factor 4,
from (8.6 +- 2.4)x10E-3 cts/s, corresponding to (5.5 +- 1.5)x10E-13 erg
sE-1 cmE-2 to (2.3 +- 0.6)x10E-3 cts/s corresponding to
(1.5 +- 0.6)x10E-13 erg sE-1 cmE-2. For comparison a ROSAT source, 1RXS
J031250.0-680915, out of the WFC error box but visible in the same MECS
image, does not show any statistically significant variation during the
entire observation. We conclude that 1SAX J0310.6-6806 is likely the X-ray
afterglow of GRB990806."
This message can be cited
GCN Circular 400
Subject
GRB990806: BATSE Observations
Date
1999-08-10T16:33:14Z (26 years ago)
From
Timothy Giblin at MSFC <giblin@bowie.msfc.nasa.gov>
T. Giblin, G. Richardson, and R. M. Kippen (University of Alabama
in Huntsville) report on behalf of the BATSE GRB Team:
GRB990806 was detected by BATSE on 1999 August 6.60285 UT as trigger
7701. The time profile of the burst exhibits a FRED-like structure
(fast rise and slower decay) with some variability on shorter time
scales. The T50 and T90 durations are 4.93 (+/- 0.26) and 17.41
(+/- 3.84) seconds, respectively. The peak flux of the burst,
integrated over 1.024 s in the 50-300 keV range, is 1.60 (+/- 0.05)
photons cmE-2 sE-1, placing it in the top 28% of the BATSE peak flux
distribution. The fluence (>20 keV) of the burst is 3.29 (+/- 0.53)
x 10E-6 erg cmE-2, ranking it in the top 43% of the BATSE fluence
distribution. The average spectral hardness of the burst (H32), as
determined by the ratio of total counts in the 100-300 keV to the
50-100 keV range, is 0.811 (+/- 0.034), average for BATSE GRBs of
this duration. The BATSE location error circle (90% conf.) is
slightly offset (~2 degrees) from the BeppoSAX WFC location (GCN 393).
The lightcurve and skymap location that includes the WFC and BATSE
locations for this event (and other notable GRBs) are available at
the BATSE Rapid Burst Response world-wide-web site:
http://www.batse.msfc.nasa.gov/~kippen/batserbr/
GCN Circular 399
Subject
GRB 990806 Optical observations
Date
1999-08-10T00:24:42Z (26 years ago)
From
Fiona Harrison at CalTech <fiona@srl.caltech.edu>
J. Prochaska, I. Thompson (OCIW), J. S. Bloom, F. A. Harrison,
S. R. Kulkarni (CIT), D. A. Frail (NRAO) report: "On the night of 7
August 1999 UT, we imaged the field of GRB 990806 (Piro GCN #392;
Gandolfi GCN #393) with the Swope 40-inch telescope at Las Campanas
Observatory. The total integration time was 900-s in R (approximately
Cousins) and the mean epoch was 7.4186 August 1999 UT. Photometric
comparison with secondary standards from Kemp et al. (GCN #395) yields
a 3-sigma point source detection threshold of R~=22.5. In agreement
with previously reported measurements (GCN #394; GCN #395; GCN #396;
GCN #397; GCN #398), we find no new sources not present in the Digital
Sky Survey.
A 4'x4' image of the field centered on the BeppoSAX position can be
obtained at http://www.srl.caltech.edu/~fiona/grb990806.html
The reduced, medianed frame can be obtained at
http://www.srl.caltech.edu/~fiona/grb990806-aug7-lco-rband-900s.fits
This message can be cited."
GCN Circular 398
Subject
Optical Observations of GRB990806
Date
1999-08-09T17:51:28Z (26 years ago)
From
Elena Pian at ITESRE-CNR,Bologna <pian@tesre.bo.cnr.it>
P.M. Vreeswijk (U. of Amsterdam), E. Palazzi, E. Pian, F. Frontera
(ITESRE, CNR, Bologna), M. Bessell (Mount Stromlo Obs.), J. Hjorth, B.
Milvang-Jensen, H. Pedersen (CUO, Copenhagen), J. van Paradijs (U. of
Amsterdam and U. of Alabama in Huntsville), and C. Kouveliotou
(USRA/MSFC) report on behalf of the Bologna/Rome, Amsterdam/Huntsville
and Copenhagen GRB optical follow-up teams:
"We have observed the error box of GRB990806 (Piro 1999, GCN 392) at the
40inch telescope at the Siding Spring Observatory (3.8 hours after the
burst) and at the ESO Danish 1.54m telescope. A log of the observations
is reported in the following Table:
Date Telescope ExpoTime Band Lim.mag.
(UT) (min) (5 sigma, ap. rad.=FWHM)
1999 August 6.76 40inch 40 R 22.0
August 6.80 40inch 60 B 21.5
August 7.24 1.54m+DFOSC 50 R 22.8
August 7.40 1.54m+DFOSC 10 B 22.4
Comparison between the 40inch images and Danish images does not reveal a
source varying by more than 0.3 magnitudes both in the R and B band.
The ESO Danish R-band image can be inspected at
http://tonno.tesre.bo.cnr.it/~pian/grb/grb990806.html
This message is citeable."
GCN Circular 397
Subject
GRB 990806, Optical Observations
Date
1999-08-08T23:59:42Z (26 years ago)
From
Jonathan Kemp at Biosphere 2 Ctr/Columbia U <jonathan@astro.bio2.edu>
J. Kemp, R. Uglesich, N. Mirabal, J. Halpern (Columbia),
D. Harkavy (Harvard), E. Costa (IAS/CNR, Rome) report
on behalf of the BeppoSAX team and the MDM Observatory
GRB follow-up team's southern extension:
"We reobserved the BeppoSAX WFC error circle of GRB 990806
(Piro GCN 392; Gandolfi GCN 393) in the R band using the CTIO 0.9m.
A total exposure of 180 minutes was obtained starting on
Aug. 8.31 UT. Seeing was 1".3. The 5-sigma limiting magnitude
of the summed R-band image is 23.8. No variable object is
detected in comparison with images obtained on the previous night
(GCN 395). Using a sensitive difference imaging technique,
we set a limit of R > 23.3 on Aug. 7.3 for any fading optical
transient in the WFC error circle. This is consistent with the
R-band limit of 23.5 set by the ESO 2.2m (Greiner et al. GCN 396