SGR 0501+4516
GCN Circular 8461
Subject
SGR 0501+4516: optical observations in August
Date
2008-11-02T13:48:28Z (17 years ago)
From
Alexei Pozanenko at IKI, Moscow <apozanen@iki.rssi.ru>
V. Rumyantsev, S. Artemenko (CrAO), A. Pozanenko (IKI), A. J. Castro-Tirado
(IAA-CSIC Granada), report on behalf of larger GRB follow-up collaboration:
We observed the field of SGR 0501+4516 (Holland et al. GCN 8112, Barthelmy
et al. GCN 8113), in I band on August 26-28 with Shajn telescope of CrAO.
The observation epochs are 2008-08-26T23:17:51 -- 2008-08-27T00:05:51 and
2008-08-27T23:27:32 -- 2008-08-28T00:31:32. We do not detect NIR/optical
counterpart of SGR 0501+4516 (Tanvir et al, GCN 8126, Rea et al, GCN 8159,
Fatkhullin et al, GCN 8160) in the first epoch, while in the second epoch
(Aug. 27.9993) one may suggest a presence of counterpart. Upper limits of
combined images are following:
Mean epoch, Exposure, UL (3sigma)
Aug. 26.9874 60x34 22.8
Aug. 27.9993 60x60 23.6
GCN Circular 8265
Subject
SGR 0501+4516: preliminary results of the Suzaku ToO observation
Date
2008-09-18T04:41:04Z (17 years ago)
From
Kazutaka Yamaoka at Aoyama Gakuin U <yamaoka@phys.aoyama.ac.jp>
Y.E. Nakagawa (RIKEN), K. Yamaoka, A. Yoshida (AGU),
T. Enoto, K. Nakazawa (U. Tokyo), K. Makishima (U. Tokyo/RIKEN),
N. Rea (U. Amsterdam), P. Esposito (INAF/IASF),
T. Sakamoto (GSFC/UMBC), and K. Hurley (U.C. Berkeley),
on behalf of the Suzaku SGR ToO team, report:
We report on a Suzaku ToO observation of the new soft gamma-ray
repeater SGR 0501+4516 (Holland et al. GCN #8112, Barthelmy et al.
GCN #8113), started on 2008-08-26 00:05 UT, for an exposure time of
about 43 ksec (Mitsuda et al. GCN #8136). A bright point source was
clearly detected in the XIS CCDs at a position consistent with that of
SGR 0501+4516 (Evans et al. GCN #8148).
From a preliminary analysis of the XIS data, the 1-10 keV persistent
emission spectrum is well fit by a black body with a temperature of
0.7 keV, plus a power-law with a photon index of 2.9, absorbed by a
hydrogen column density of 1.0x10^22 cm^-2. The absorbed 1-10 keV flux
was (3.7+/-0.1)x10^-11 erg/cm^2/s. The XIS data confirm the source
pulsations at a period of P = 5.762 +/- 0.001 s, consistent with the
periodicity derived by the RXTE/PCA (Gogus et al. GCN #8118),
Swift/XRT (Mangano et al. GCN #8146), and XMM-Newton (Rea et al. Atel
#1688; Israel et al. Atel #1692)
At least 16 short bursts were detected during the observation.
The largest burst was observed on 2008-08-26 03:16:16 by all Suzaku's
instruments including Suzaku-WAM, up to an energy of ~200 keV. The HXD
spectral analysis of the persistent and burst emission is in progress.
We would like to thank the Suzaku managers and the operation team
for approving and carrying out the ToO observation.
GCN Circular 8229
Subject
SGR 0501+4516 : P200 i-band observations
Date
2008-09-15T06:16:56Z (17 years ago)
From
Eran Ofek at Tel Aviv U. <eran@wise1.tau.ac.il>
E. O. Ofek (Caltech), M. Kiewe and I. Arcavi (Weizmann Institute)
report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
On 2008 Sep 02.509 we obtained 7x120s i-band images of the region of SGR
0501+4516 with the Large Format Camera, mounted on the Hale 5m telescope.
At the position of the near-IR/visible light counterpart of SGR 0501+4516
(Rea et al. GCN 8159; Fatkhullin et al. GCN 8160; de Ugarte Postigo et al.
GCN 8162; Rol et al. GCN 8164) we marginally detected a source.
Using a POSS-II I-band magnitude of a nearby star to calibrate
the image, we find that this source has i(AB)=23.5+/-0.4 mag.
This measurement is consistent with the one reported by
Fatkhullin et al. (GCN 8160), who detected an I=23.3+/-0.4 source
at this position, on 2008 Aug 25.
GCN Circular 8168
Subject
Recent VLA non-detection of SGR 0501+4516
Date
2008-09-02T18:17:02Z (17 years ago)
From
Joseph Gelfand at NYU/NSF <jg168@cosmo.nyu.edu>
Joseph D. Gelfand (NYU / NSF), Gregory Taylor (UNM), Chryssa Kouveliotou
(NASA/MSFC), Bryan Gaensler (U. Sydney), and Alexander J. van der Horst
(NASA/ORAU) report:
A VLA observation of SGR 0501+4516 (GCN 8113) on 2008 August 31 between
1109 UT and 1358 UT did not detect a radio source at the position reported
in GCN 8148 at 4.8 GHz, the only frequency used during this observation.
The resultant five sigma upper-limit on the radio emission during this
period is < 0.1 mJy (rms = 20 uJy). We would like to thank NRAO for
promptly scheduling these VLA observations.
GCN Circular 8166
Subject
SGR 0501+4516: Spin Down Rate and Inferred Dipole Magnetic Field
Date
2008-09-02T16:00:32Z (17 years ago)
From
Chryssa Kouveliotou at MSFC <chryssa.kouveliotou@nasa.gov>
SGR 0501+4516: Spin Down Rate and Inferred Dipole Magnetic Field
Peter M. Woods (Dynetics), Ersin Gogus (Sabanci University), Chryssa
Kouveliotou (NASA/MSFC), report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
We continued monitoring the new Soft Gamma Repeater SGR 0501+4516
(Barthelmy et al. 2008, GCN # 8113, Palmer et al. 2008, ATel # 1678)
using our SGR ToO Program with RXTE. We acquired a total exposure of 40
ks in 13 RXTE pointings performed over a time span of ~7.5 days. The
time spacing between each pointing ranged between 0.1 - 0.9 d. We detect
numerous (between 1 to 50) short bursts in observations before 2008
August 28. We clearly detect the 5.76 s pulsations reported by Gogus et
al. 2008 (ATel # 1677) in the 2-10 keV PCA data. We employed a quadratic
spline fit to phase residuals and measured the spin period, P =
5.762067(2) s and the spin-down rate, Pdot = 1.5(5) x 10^-11 s/s. Note
that our spin period measurement is consistent with that reported by
Mangano et al. (2008, ATel # 1682). Assuming that the neutron star slows
down via magnetic dipole radiation, we infer a dipole magnetic field of
B = 3 x 10^14 G, confirming the new SGR as a new magnetar candidate.
GCN Circular 8165
Subject
SGR 0501+4516: preliminary results of the first XMM-Newton observation
Date
2008-09-02T13:51:00Z (17 years ago)
From
Nanda Rea at U of Amsterdam <nrea@science.uva.nl>
N. Rea (U. Amsterdam), S. Mereghetti (INAF-IASF, Milan), G.L Israel
(INAF-OAR), P. Esposito, A. Tiengo (INAF-IASF, Milan), S. Zane (UCL-MSSL)
report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
XMM-Newton observed the new Soft Gamma-ray Repeater SGR 0501+4516
(Holland et al., GCN 8112; Barthelmy et al., GCN 8113)
for ~49ks on 2008 August 23rd starting at 01:04:00 (UT).
Preliminary results show that the source flux is enhanced in
the soft X-ray range with respect to the possible quiescent
ROSAT counterpart (Kennea et al., Atel 1675).
The source persistent EPIC-PN spectrum is well fitted (in the 1-10keV
energy range; reduced chi2 = 1.02) by an absorbed blackbody plus a
power-law with Nh = 0.89(2) x 1022 cm-2, kT = 0.69(5) keV and photon
index Gamma= 2.76(6). The absorbed 1-10keV flux is 3.96x10-11
erg/s/cm2.
We measure a spin period of 5.762069(5)s (consistent with the
RXTE and Swift-XRT determinations: Gogus et al., Atel 1677; Mangano et
al., Atel 1682), with a fundamental component pulsed fraction of 40(1)%
(pulsed fraction defined as the background-corrected semi-amplitude of
the best fitting sine component, and in the whole EPIC-PN energy band).
Several short X-ray bursts have been detected in this observation,
the brightest ones also observed by Swift BAT (Palmer et al., Atel 1678).
A detailed analysis of this and the subsequent observations of our
XMM-Newton monitoring program (Rea et al., GCN 8152) is in progress.
Note that we postponed the last observation of our monitoring (September
6th, see GCN 8152), and will promptly diffuse a new date encouraging
multiwavelegth follow-ups.
We thank Norbert Schartel and the XMM-Newton team for carrying out this
ToO observation.
[GCN OPS NOTE(10sep08): Per author's request, in the Subject-line,
the "0105" was changed to "0501".]
GCN Circular 8164
Subject
nIR observations of SGR 0501+4516
Date
2008-09-02T12:27:14Z (17 years ago)
From
Evert Rol at U.Leicester <er45@star.le.ac.uk>
E. Rol, N. Tanvir (U. of Leicester), N. Rea (U. of Amsterdam),
K. Wiersema (U. of Leicester), I. Skillen (ING) and P. A. Curran (U. of
Amsterdam) report for a larger collaboration:
We observed the candidate counterpart to SGR 0501+4516 with LIRIS at
WHT, Roque the Los Muchachos and NIRI at Gemini-North, Mauna Kea,
around August 31, 3 UT and September 1, 14 UT, respectively. On both
epochs, we measure a magnitude of K = 19.1 +/- 0.1, consistent with
the magnitude previously reported in GCN 8159 (magnitudes calibrated
to 2MASS). This is in contrast to the upper limit given in GCN 8162,
though our observations do not preclude a sudden decrease and
subsequent rise to the previous flux level. Our observations, however,
indicate a relatively stable nIR counterpart candidate over this time
interval.
GCN Circular 8163
Subject
INTEGRAL ToO observation of SGR0501+4516
Date
2008-09-01T18:54:53Z (17 years ago)
From
Kevin Hurley at UCBerkeley/SSL <khurley@ssl.berkeley.edu>
K. Hurley and D. Gotz, on behalf of the INTEGRAL AO-6 SGR
collaboration, report:
INTEGRAL carried out a ToO observation of SGR 0501+4516 from
2008-08-27T00:46 to 2008-08-29T13:36 (GCN 8131). A very preliminary
analysis of the data indicates that IBIS/ISGRI detected the quiescent
X-ray emission at the 2 mCrab level between 20 and 40 keV. At least
four bursts were detected, at
2008-08-27T16:25:14
2008-08-27T22:25:57
2008-08-28T03:32:28
2008-08-28T20:59:42
Data analysis is ongoing.
We would like to thank the INTEGRAL project for their support
and particularly Dominique Eckert and Volker Beckmann for the
quick-look analysis.
GCN Circular 8162
Subject
SGR 0501+4516: Confirmation of the NIR counterpart
Date
2008-08-29T22:06:04Z (17 years ago)
From
Antonio Deugarte at IAA-CSIC <deugarte@iaa.es>
A. de Ugarte Postigo (ESO, Santiago), A. J. Castro-Tirado, J. Gorosabel
(IAA-CSIC, Granada), M. Morales-Calder�n and N. Hu�lamo (LAEFF-INTA,
Madrid), on behalf of a larger collaboration, report:
We have observed the field of SGR 0501+4516 (Holland et al. GCNC 8112,
Barthelmy et al. GCNC 8113) using the 4.2m WHT (equipped with LIRIS) on
Aug. 29.245 UT. A short integration in the K-band does not show any source
at the position of the proposed NIR counterpart (Tanvir et al. GCNC 8126)
down to a 3-sigma limiting magnitude of K~19.5. This is consistent with
the flux decline observed by Rea et al. on Aug 25 (GCNC 8159) and would
correspond with the decline in high energy activity reported by Palmer
(GCN 8150, ATEL #1683). This implies that the source reported in the NIR
by Tanvir et al. and in the optical by Fatkhullin et al. (GCNC 8160) is
most likely the counterpart for SGR 0501+4516 at these wavelengths.
This message can be quoted.
GCN Circular 8160
Subject
SGR 0501+4516: Detection of possible optical counterpart
Date
2008-08-29T11:49:38Z (17 years ago)
Edited On
2024-11-18T09:43:30Z (a year ago)
From
Alberto Castro-Tirado at Inst.de Astro. de Andalucia <ajct@iaa.es>
Edited By
Judith Racusin at NASA/GSFC <judith.racusin@nasa.gov> on behalf of Leo P. Singer at NASA/GSFC <leo.p.singer@nasa.gov>
T. Fatkhullin (SAO-RAS Nizhnij Arkhyz), A. de Ugarte Postigo (ESO
Santiago), A. J. Castro-Tirado, J. Gorosabel and M. Jelínek (IAA-CSIC
Granada), V. Sokolov (SAO-RAS), S. Guziy (Nikolaev State Univ.), A.
Pozanenko (IKI-RAS Moscow), E. Sonbas (Cukurova Univ.) and D.
Pérez-Ramírez (U. Leicester), on behalf of a larger collaboration, report:
"Continuing with our monitoring campaign of the field of the SGR
0501+4516 (Holland et al. GCNC 8112, Barthelmy et al. GCNC 8113) we have
used the 6.0m BTA telescope (equipped with SCORPIO) at the Special
Astrophysical Observatory (SAO, Russia). A combination of exposures
adding a total of 1530s in the I-band obtained at a mean epoch of August
25.18468 UT shows a low S/N source consistent with the NIR object
reported by Tanvir and Varrycatt (GCN 8126), with a magnitude of I =
23.3 ± 0.4. Taking into account the nIR magnitude reported by Rea et al.
at about the same epoch (GCNC 8159), we derive an apparent color index
(I-Ks) = 4.1 ± 0.6, uncorrected for Galactic extinction in the line of
sight to the source. Further observations are planned."
This message can be quoted.
GCN Circular 8159
Subject
SGR 0501+4516: WHT observations of the possible near-infrared counterpart
Date
2008-08-29T10:34:57Z (17 years ago)
From
Nanda Rea at U of Amsterdam <nrea@science.uva.nl>
N. Rea (U. Amsterdam), E. Rol (U. Leicester), P.A. Curran (U.
Amsterdam), I. Skillen (Isaac Newton Group), D.M. Russell (U.
Amsterdam), G.L. Israel (INAF) on behalf of a larger collaboration
On 2008 August 25 we observed the new Soft Gamma-ray Repeater SGR
0501+4516 with LIRIS, the near-infrared imager on the William Herschel
Telescope (WHT) in La Palma. The observations were performed in the Ks
band with a total exposure time of 1.8 hours.
We clearly detect one object within the refined XRT error circle (GCN
8148), at the position:
05:01:06.74 +45:16:34.1 (J2000)
with an uncertainty of 0.25 arcseconds (with respect to 2MASS
astrometry). This is consistent with being the UKIRT suggested nIR
counterpart (GCN 8126). We find the object at a magnitude of 19.2+/-0.2
(with respect to 2MASS calibration), slightly fainter than the UKIRT
detection. We plan to take further observations from WHT in a few days
to confirm this very tentative nIR variability.
We wish to thank Chris Benn and Rene Rutten for promptly approving our
Target of Opportunity request.
GCN Circular 8155
Subject
VLA non-detection of SGR 0501+4516
Date
2008-08-28T15:24:33Z (17 years ago)
From
Joseph Gelfand at NYU/NSF <jg168@cosmo.nyu.edu>
Joseph D. Gelfand (NYU / NSF), Gregory Taylor (UNM), Chryssa Kouveliotou
(NASA/MSFC), Bryan Gaensler (U. Sydney), and Alexander J. van der Horst
(NASA/ORAU) report:
A VLA observation of SGR 0501+4516 (GCN 8113) on 2008 August 27 between 0846 UT
and 1215 UT did not detect a radio source at the position reported in GCN 8148
at any of the four observed frequencies. The five sigma upper-limits on the
radio emission during this period are:
1.4 GHz < 1 mJy (rms = 0.2 mJy)
4.8 GHz <0.15 mJy (rms = 30 uJy)
8.5 GHz < 0.2 mJy (rms = 40 uJy)
22 GHz < 1.5 mJy (rms = 0.3 mJy)
We would like to thank NRAO for promptly scheduling these VLA observations.
GCN Circular 8154
Subject
Radio Detection of SGR 0501+4516: Retraction
Date
2008-08-28T14:02:44Z (17 years ago)
From
Dale A. Frail at NRAO <dfrail@nrao.edu>
D. A. Frail and S. R. Kulkarni report:
We have re-analyzed the VLA data taken at the VLA on 2008 August 24
and 25. We were unable to confirm the detection reported early by
Kulkarni & Frail (GCN 8130). The radio source seen in the second epoch
appears to be spurious, an artifact of the observing method, missed in
the initial data reduction.
Combining all data from August 24 and 25, the final limits on the flux
density at the position of the SGR are:
43 +/- 400 uJy (1.43 GHz)
-12 +/- 23 uJy (8.46 GHz)
GCN Circular 8152
Subject
SGR 0501+4516: XMM-Newton monitoring schedule
Date
2008-08-28T08:09:36Z (17 years ago)
From
Nanda Rea at U of Amsterdam <nrea@science.uva.nl>
N. Rea (U. Amsterdam), G.L. Israel, S. Mereghetti, A. Tiengo, P.
Esposito (INAF), D. Gotz (CEA-Saclay) on behalf of a larger collaboration
We have triggered a ToO monitoring observation of SGR 0501+4516 with
XMM-Newton. The planned observing windows are:
Start(UT) Duration [s]
2008-08-29 06:48 26000
2008-08-31 09:45 22000
2008-09-02 09:45 22000
2008-09-06 13:20 27500
Simultaneous observations at all wavelengths are encouraged.
We are grateful to the XMM-Newton planning team for the efficiency in
scheduling these observations, and to Norbert Schartel for approving our
trigger.
GCN Circular 8150
Subject
SGR 0501+4516: Decline in Activity
Date
2008-08-28T01:10:37Z (17 years ago)
From
David Palmer at LANL <palmer@lanl.gov>
This is a duplicate of ATEL #1683 (which should be cited instead of
this GCN) copied to GCN as a courtesy to the gamma-ray burst community.
David Palmer (LANL) on behalf of the Swift Team, reports:
SGR 0501+4516 (ATEL #1675, #1676, #1677, #1678, #1682) has declined in
activity. There have been no reported bursts in 43 hours, compared to
the previous period with 56 bursts in 87 hours and a largest gap of 8
hours.
Due to the unpredictable nature of these objects, this does not
necessarily imply that it has returned to a multi-year (or even multi-
day) quiescent stage.
As of the latest available Swift-BAT data, 2008-08-27 22:40 UT, the
most recent reported burst from the SGR was detected by Konus-Wind on
2008-08-26 at 03:16:15 (Konus-Wind team, private communication). The
most recent BAT detection was about 8 hours earlier.
The current list of BAT bursts, plus the reported Konus Wind bursts
(from GCN #8132), follows. As in ATEL #1676, which this expands, the
bursts with more than 2000 counts in the BAT are marked with a '*'.
Trigger time (UTC) Trigger (ms) Notes
2008-08-22 12:41:59 64 *
2008-08-22 13:09:04 256
2008-08-22 13:12:53 16 *
2008-08-22 13:20:30 during slew
2008-08-22 14:17:55 256
2008-08-22 14:34:26 32
2008-08-22 17:29:30 64
2008-08-22 22:24:20 32
2008-08-22 22:36:53 32
2008-08-22 22:53:51 16
2008-08-23 00:28:13 32
2008-08-23 02:11:39 * during slew, 13k BAT counts
2008-08-23 04:47:49 16 * 35k BAT counts, seen by Konus-Wind
2008-08-23 06:31:37 16
2008-08-23 07:01:12 during slew, wrong time in ATEL #1678
2008-08-23 08:30:04 16 *
2008-08-23 08:34:57 32
2008-08-23 11:07:38 16
2008-08-23 11:27:35 16 * 90k BAT counts, seen by Konus-Wind
2008-08-23 14:27:37 64
2008-08-23 14:56:26 64 *
2008-08-23 16:31:22 16
2008-08-23 17:35:14 32 * 17k BAT counts
2008-08-23 17:35:15 128
2008-08-23 17:59:01 8
2008-08-23 19:08:10 128
2008-08-23 20:49:10 256
2008-08-23 20:53:29 16
2008-08-23 21:09:20 32
2008-08-23 21:11:17 64
2008-08-23 21:11:20 16
2008-08-23 21:13:40 64
2008-08-23 22:37:55 8
2008-08-24 00:05:30 128
2008-08-24 00:19:47 8 *
2008-08-24 01:17:55 Seen by Konus-Wind, not by BAT
2008-08-24 01:53:07 32
2008-08-24 02:02:47 32
2008-08-24 02:04:36 32
2008-08-24 06:56:53 32
2008-08-24 08:18:27 32
2008-08-24 08:23:39 16 * double peak
2008-08-24 08:23:39 32
2008-08-24 10:17:37 128
2008-08-24 18:19:38 128
2008-08-24 19:52:53 64 *
2008-08-24 22:30:12 16
2008-08-25 00:46:28 32
2008-08-25 03:19:18 32
2008-08-25 04:48:27 Seen by Konus-Wind, not by BAT
2008-08-25 10:22:03 16
2008-08-25 11:55:32 32
2008-08-25 19:24:09 32
2008-08-26 03:16:15 Seen by Konus-Wind, not by BAT
This GCN may not be cited. Please cite ATEL #1683 instead.
GCN Circular 8149
Subject
SGR 0501+4516: Proximity to supernova remnant HB9
Date
2008-08-27T21:04:34Z (17 years ago)
From
Bryan Gaensler at U of Sydney <bmg@physics.usyd.edu.au>
B. M. Gaensler (U. Sydney) and S. Chatterjee (U. Sydney) report:
We note that the newly identified magnetar SGR 0501+4516
(GCN 8113) is in close proximity to the Galactic supernova
remnant (SNR) HB9 = G160.9+2.6.
Specifically, the location of the SGR as determined by Swift XRT
(GCN 8112; GCN 8148) is just outside the south-eastern rim of HB9.
A 1.4 GHz radio image of the SNR taken from the Canadian Galactic
Plane Survey, and showing the position of the SGR, is available at:
http://www.physics.usyd.edu.au/~bmg/fig_sgr_snr.gif
The angular separation from the SNR's centre is approximately
80 arcmin, corresponding to a projected space velocity of
1700-4300 km/s for a distance to the SNR of 1.5 kpc and an age of
8000-20000 years (Leahy & Aschenbach, 1995, A&A, 293, 853).
The SGR's location outside the rim of a SNR and its high inferred
space velocity are similar properties to those inferred for other
SGRs. While there is as yet insufficient information to judge the
validity of a physical association between SGR 0501+4516 and SNR HB9,
we note that this anti-centre region is relatively devoid of SNRs
and other evidence for massive star formation: there are only two
other catalogued SNRs within 15 degrees of this position. A search
for other neutron stars associated with HB9 (Kaplan et al., 2006,
ApJS, 163, 344) did not detect any candidates.
GCN Circular 8148
Subject
Enhanced Swift-XRT position of SGR 0501+4516
Date
2008-08-27T19:10:32Z (17 years ago)
From
Phil Evans at U of Leicester <pae9@star.le.ac.uk>
P.A. Evans and J.P. Osborne (U. Leicester) report on behalf of the
Swift-XRT team:
Using 9.1 ks of XRT Photon Counting mode data and 35 UVOT images, we find
an astrometrically corrected X-ray position for SGR 0501+4516 (using the
XRT-UVOT alignment and matching UVOT field sources to the USNO-B1
catalogue): RA, Dec = 75.27834, +45.27649 which is equivalent to:
RA (J2000): 05h 01m 6.80s
Dec (J2000): +45d 16' 35.4"
with an uncertainty of 1.4 arcsec (radius, 90% confidence). This
position is consistent with the possible infra-red counterpart (Tanvir &
Varricatt, GCN Circ. 8126