TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 15415 SUBJECT: GRB 131024C: ICSP discovery of a burst in X-rays by balloon borne study DATE: 13/10/31 11:52:50 GMT FROM: Sandip K. Chakrabarti at S.N. Bose Nat. Centre for Basic Sci. GRB 131024C: ICSP discovery of a burst in X-rays by balloon borne study Sandip K. Chakrabarti (SNBNCBS, ICSP & ICRANET), D. Bhowmick (ICSP), S. Chakraborty (ICSP), R. Sarkar (ICSP) Indian Centre for Space Physics (ICSP) balloon borne Dignity-45 mission with a 2 inch diameter (~ 20 sq cm) Bicron (NaI) X-ray detector was surveying a slice of the sky with a 40 degree FOV circular collimator (transparent >100keV), tilted at 40 degree with the zenith. At 07:48:54 UT, it detected a GRB with a location within a 20 degree radius circle centered at around RA(J2000) = 13h 27m 59s Dec(J2000) = + 52d 44m 43.7s The peak count (at 07:48:54s UT) rate was ~ 740/sec (20-100keV) after a possible precursor 4s earlier. The total duration, with weaker peaks is about 10 seconds. The light curve, 2s average spectrum at the peak, the dynamical spectrum, and the approximate location of the GRB are given in the webpage: http://www.csp.res.in/ICSP-WEB/Balloon/Near%20space%20Exploration.html Our time resolution was one second, so finer time stamp was not possible. The balloon altitude at the time of observation was 34km. Hence there was a severe absorption at the lower energy of the spectrum. The flux at the peak is 1.53x10^-6 ergs/cm^2/s (20-100keV). We verified with FERMI and SWIFT teams that the satellites were on the other side of the sky and thus both have missed it.