ZTF21aaeyldq
GCN Circular 29364
Subject
ZTF21aaeyldq: Observations with the 3.6m DOT
Date
2021-01-27T11:42:29Z (5 years ago)
From
Dimple Panchal at ARIES, India <dimplepanchal96@gmail.com>
Ankur Ghosh (ARIES), Dimple (ARIES), Amit Kumar (ARIES), Rahul Gupta
(ARIES), Kuntal Misra (ARIES) and Shashi B. Pandey (ARIES) report:
We obtained further observations of the ZTF21aaeyldq/AT2021any (Ho et
al. GCN #29305, de Ugarte Postigo et al. GCN #29307, Kumar et al. #GCN
29308) with 4K x 4K CCD Imager mounted on 3.6m Devasthal Optical
Telescope (DOT) at Devasthal observatory of ARIES, India, in r-band
at 9.41 days after discovery. We acquired a consecutive set of 12
images with an exposure time of 300 seconds each. We do not detect any
optical counterpart upto a magnitude limit of 23.98 in the stacked
image. The limit do agree with the decay index reported by Kann et al.
GCN #29344.
GCN Circular 29344
Subject
ZTF21aaeyldq: GROND and CAHA jet break confirmation
Date
2021-01-22T17:37:47Z (5 years ago)
From
Alexander Kann at IAA-CSIC <kann@iaa.es>
D. A. Kann (HETH/IAA-CSIC), A. Nicuesa Guelbenzu (TLS Tautenburg), A. de
Ugarte Postigo (HETH/IAA-CSIC, DARK/NBI), C. C. Thoene (HETH), M.
Blazek, J. F. Agui Fernandez (both HETH/IAA-CSIC), A. Rau (MPE
Garching), S. Klose (TLS Tautenburg), and J. I. Vico Linares (CAHA)
report:
We obtained further observations of the GRB-less afterglow
ZTF21aaeyldq/AT2021any (Ho et al., GCN #29305; de Ugarte Postigo et al.,
GCN #29307) with CAFOS at the 2.2m telescope at Calar Alto, Almeria,
Spain, in the Rc band at 2.8 days post-discovery, and with GROND mounted
at the 2.2m MPG telescope at the ESO La Silla Observatory (Chile) at 3.9
days after the trigger. The afterglow is clearly detected in each
stacked image.
Further to the observations and analysis described in Kann et al. (GCN
#29321, with data from Ho et al., GCN #29305; de Ugarte Postigo et al.,
GCN #29307; and Zhu et al., GCN #29310) and Nicuesa Guelbenzu et al.
(GCN #29330), we fit the combined data set, also leaving the host-galaxy
magnitudes free, as the GROND data shows a characteristic flattening.
We find that a single power-law fit does not describe the data well
(chi^2/d.o.f. = 3.7), overestimating the CAHA data and not fitting the
curvature seen in the GROND data. However, a broken power-law fit yields
a significantly improved result (chi^2/d.o.f. = 0.12) with fit
parameters alpha_1 = 0.95 +/- 0.03, alpha_2 = 2.30 +/- 0.76 and t_b =
0.82 +/- 0.08 days. This fit may be improved or modified with further
data/observations, but the break signature is clear. It therefore
confirms the initial suggestion of Kann et al. (GCN #29321). This is a
typical feature in GRB afterglows and a further indicator that the
nature of this transient is a GRB afterglow.
Ho et al., GCN #29305, report the first detection at
2021-01-16T06:59:45.6, and a deep non-detection 22 minutes earlier.
Antia et al., GCN #29340, and Nadella et al., GCN #29342, report the
detection of a bright GRB 210116A with AstroSat LAXPC and CZTI at ~05:53
UR on the same day, about 44 minutes before the ZTF non-detection.
Judging from typical GRB afterglow behavior, this makes it unlikely that
the two events are associated with each other but does not rule it out.
An IPN localization of GRB 210116A could confirm or rule out the
association.
GCN Circular 29330
Subject
ZTF21aaeyldq: GROND observations
Date
2021-01-19T16:38:42Z (5 years ago)
Edited On
2024-11-07T19:59:14Z (a year ago)
From
Ana Nicuesa at TLS Tautenburg <ana@tls-tautenburg.de>
Edited By
Vidushi Sharma at NASA GSFC/UMBC <vidushi.sharma@nasa.gov> on behalf of Leo P. Singer at NASA/GSFC <leo.p.singer@nasa.gov>
A. Nicuesa Guelbenzu (TLS Tautenburg), A. Rau (MPE Garching),
and S. Klose (TLS Tautenburg) report:
We observed the field of ZTF21aaeyldq/AT2021any (Ho et al., GCN 29305)
with GROND mounted at the 2.2m MPG telescope at the ESO La Silla
Observatory (Chile).
Observations were performed during three epochs. The data were
calibrated against SDSS stars in the field.
In the g' band we measure the following AB magnitudes:
dt/days mag
1.82415 23.39 +/- 0.11
2.02104 23.47 +/- 0.06
2.87115 23.84 +/- 0.09.
Following Kann et al. (GCN 29321), here we assumed a GRB trigger time
22 minutes before the discovery image (Ho et al., GCN 29305), i.e., at
JD 2459230.77622.
Based on these three epochs, we measure a decay slope of 0.94 +/-
0.05, in agreement with Kann et al. (GCN 29321). There is no evidence
for an underlying host galaxy.
The transient was not detected in the NIR bands.
We thank Sam Kim (PUC) for performing the observations and all people,
in particular P. Eigenthaler, R. Lechaume, A. Hempel, M. Hempel,
T. Schweyer, A. González, involved in bringing GROND back online after
its shutdown due to the Covid 19 pandemia in early 2020.
GCN Circular 29327
Subject
ZTF21aaeyldq: LBT near-infrared observations
Date
2021-01-19T13:46:36Z (5 years ago)
From
Andrea Rossi at INAF <andrea.rossi@inaf.it>
A. Rossi, E. Palazzi (INAF-OAS) reports on behalf of the GRAWITA
collaboration:
We observed the field of ZTF21aaeyldq (Ho et al., GCN 29305)
simultaneously the J and H bands with the LUCI near-infrared imager and
spectrograph mounted on the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT, Mt Graham,
AZ, USA). Observations were obtained on 2021-01-17 at the UT 06:35:00
(midtime), i.e. ~1 day after the first ZTF detection, for a total of 15
min of on-source exposure time in each band under not very good sky
conditions (seeing=1.4").
We detect the transient (de Ugarte-Postigo GCN#29307, Kumar et al., GCNs
#29308; Ahumada et al., GCN #29309; Zhu et al., GCN #29310; Hu et al.,
GCN #29312, Kann et al., GCN #29321) in both J and H-band images, and we
measure the following AB magnitudes:
J=21.62+-0.20
H=21.36+-0.24
calibrated against 2MASS field stars.
We acknowledge the excellent support from the LBTO and LBT-INAF staff,
particularly A. Cardwell and D. Paris, in obtaining these observations.
GCN Circular 29321
Subject
ZTF21aaeyldq CAHA 2.2m detection and power-law decay
Date
2021-01-18T18:06:36Z (5 years ago)
From
Alexander Kann at IAA-CSIC <kann@iaa.es>
D. A. Kann (HETH/IAA-CSIC), A. de Ugarte Postigo (HETH/IAA-CSIC,
DARK/NBI), C. C. Thoene (HETH), M. Blazek, J. F. Agui Fernandez (both
HETH/IAA-CSIC), and J. I. Vico Linares (CAHA) report:
We observed the position of the GRB-less afterglow ZTF21aaeyldq (Ho et
al., GCN #29305; de Ugarte Postigo et al., GCN #29307) with CAFOS at the
2.2m telescope at Calar Alto, Almeria, Spain, in the Rc band. We
obtained 10 x 360 s exposures, centered at 1.74430 days after the
transient discovery, under fair conditions but mediocre seeing.
The afterglow (Kumar et al., GCNs #29308; Ahumada et al., GCN #29309;
Zhu et al., GCN #29310; Hu et al., GCN #29312) is clearly detected. We
measure Rc = 22.89 +/- 0.12 mag. (AB mag, vs. the same SDSS star as in
our GTC observation, GCN #29307 converted to Rc following the Lupton
transformations, then transformed back to AB mag).
We take data from Ho et al., GCN #29305; de Ugarte Postigo et al., GCN
#29307; and Zhu et al., GCN #29310 (all in r'), and here assume a
trigger time 22 minutes before the discovery (at the last
non-detection). We find this data is fit well with a single power-law, a
straight decay slope alpha ~ 0.91 +/- 0.02. The magnitude we report now
lies slightly (0.3 mag) below the extrapolation of the afterglow decay.
Further observations are needed to determine whether this represents a
jet break.
GCN Circular 29316
Subject
ZTF21aaeyldq: KPED observations
Date
2021-01-18T04:02:03Z (5 years ago)
From
Tomas Ahumada at U. of Maryland <tahumada@astro.umd.edu>
Michael Coughlin (UMN) and Tomas Ahumada (UMD):
We imaged the position of the fast fading ZTF source ZTF21aaeyldq (Ho et
al., GCN 29305), with the the Kitt Peak Electron Multiplying CCD (EMCCD)
demonstrator (KPED) mounted at the 2.1m Kitt Peak Telescope, starting at
2021-01-17 06:59:49 UT.
We acquired thirty 10 sec exposures in the g- and r-bands, stacked them,
and reduced them following standard procedures. After calibrating the flux
against PS1 sources in the field, we do not see the source reported by Ho
et al. down to a limit of g > 20.1 mag and r > 19.9.
--
Tomas Ahumada (he/him)
Ph.D. Student
Department of Astronomy
University of Maryland, College Park
B.Sc. Astronomy, Pontificia Universidad Cat��lica de Chile
GCN Circular 29313
Subject
ZTF21aaeyldq (AT2021any): Detection of X-ray Emission with Swift/XRT
Date
2021-01-17T18:10:08Z (5 years ago)
From
Anna Ho at UC Berkeley <annayqho@berkeley.edu>
A. Y. Q. Ho (UC Berkeley) reports on behalf of the Zwicky Transient
Facility collaboration:
We obtained a target-of-opportunity observation of ZTF21aaeyldq/AT2021any
(Ho et al., GCN 29305) with the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory starting at
UT 2021-01-17 (02h29), which is 0.81d after the first optical detection. We
detected X-ray emission at the transient position with a count rate 0.0067
ct/s. Assuming a neutral hydrogen column density n_H = 8.12E20/cm2
(Willingale et al. 2013) and a power-law spectrum with photon index 2, the
unabsorbed flux is 2.9E-13 erg/cm^2/s. At z=2.514 (A. de Ugarte Postigo et
al., GCN 29307) the luminosity is 1.5E46 erg/s, typical of GRB afterglows
at this epoch.
Further monitoring is planned, and we thank the Swift team for rapidly
scheduling and executing our observations.
--
Anna Ho
GCN Circular 29312
Subject
ZTF21aaeyldq: 2.2m CAHA BVRI optical observations
Date
2021-01-17T17:54:36Z (5 years ago)
From
Youdong HU at IAA-CSIC <huyoudong072@hotmail.com>
Y.-D. Hu, E. Fernandez-Garcia, A.J. Castro-Tirado, M.D. Caballero-Garcia, M.A. Castro-Tirado (IAA-CSIC), R.P. Hedrosa, I. Hermelo, I. Vico (CAHA) on behalf of a larger collaboration, report:
Following the detection of ZTF21aaeyldq (AT2021any) by the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF; Ho et al., GCNC 29305), we triggered the 2.2m CAHA telescope in Almeria (Spain) equipped with CAFOS. BVRI images were gathered starting on Jan 17, 00:02 UT (17.04 hours after first optical detection). Second epoch BVRI images were taken starting at 04:08 UT. The optical counterpart is clearly detected at the ZTF position (Ho et al., GCNC 29305, de Ugarte Postigo et al., GCN 29307, Kumar et al., GCNC 29308, Ahumada et al., GCNC 29309 and Zhu et al., GCNC 29310). We measure a first epoch R-band magnitude (non-extinction corrected) of R = 21.27+-0.13 mag at 00:15 UT, calibrated with the nearby stars present in the USNO-B1.0 catalog.
We thank the staff at CAHA observatory for their excellent support.
GCN Circular 29310
Subject
ZTF21aaeyldq: NOT optical observations
Date
2021-01-17T13:37:47Z (5 years ago)
From
Dong Xu at NAOC/CAS <dxu@nao.cas.cn>
Z.P. Zhu (NAOC, HUST), J. P. U. Fynbo (DAWN/NBI), D. A. Perley (LJMU),
S.Y. Fu, D. Xu (NAOC) report on behalf of a larger collaboration:
We observed the field of ZTF21aaeyldq/AT2021any (Ho et al., GCN 29305)
using the 2.56-m Nordic Optical Telescope (NOT) equipped with the ALFOSC
camera. We did photometry in the Sloan g-/r-/i- filters, and the source,
presumably an orphan GRB afterglow (e.g., A. de Ugarte Postigo et al.,
GCN 29307