//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 2853 SUBJECT: GRB041217: The First GRB Located On-Board Swift DATE: 04/12/17 23:59:44 GMT FROM: Ed Fenimore at LANL D. Palmer (LANL), E. Fenimore (LANL), S. Barthelmy (GSFC), G. Chincarini (OAB), J. Cummings (GSFC), N. Gehrels (GSFC), P. Giommi (ASDC), M. Goad (U.Leicester), D. Hullinger (UMD), H. Krimm (USRA), C. Markwardt (UMD), K. Mason (MSSL), K. McLean (LANL), J. Nousek (PSU), J. Osborne (U.Leicester), A. Parsons (GSFC), G. Sato (ISAS), M. Suzuki (Saitama), J. Tueller (GSFC), A. Wells (U.Leicester), N. White (GSFC), on behalf of the Swift BAT team. On Dec 17 2004, 7:28:30 UT, the Swift Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) triggered and located on-board an apparent gamma-ray burst. The spacecraft did not autonomously slew to the burst since automated slewing is not yet enabled. The location is RA/Dec 164.79, -17.95 (J2000). This is about 42 degrees off the bore sight in the partially encoded field of view. The Swift attitude control system is still undergoing calibration, but we estimate that the position is within 12 arcmin (radius). The on-orbit location differed from a location processed on the ground by about 6 arcmin. After calibration we expect on-board locations to be within 4 arcmin. The burst can be characterized as a smooth profile with a rise time of 2 sec and a fall time of 6 sec. The T90 was ~6.7. Although BAT is still undergoing calibration, ground processing gives a power law spectrum with a number index of -1.6 and a fluence of 5E-6 erg/cm^2 in the ~20 to 200 keV range. The peak was about 4.4 cts/cm^2/sec in ~15 to 200 keV. [GCN OPS NOTE (18-19dec04): "UL" was changed to "U.Leicester". And the words "(J2000)" and "(radius)" were added to the position estimate.] //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 2854 SUBJECT: GRB041217: Infrared Observations DATE: 04/12/18 13:47:07 GMT FROM: Josh Bloom at Harvard/CFA GRB041217: Infrared Observations J. S. Bloom (CfA/UCB) reports on behalf of a larger group: "We observed a ~30 arcmin x 30 arcmin field about the Swift localization of GRB 041217 (GCN #2853; Palmer et al. 2004) with the 1.3m PAIRITEL system at Mt. Hopkins, AZ. In poor seeing conditions, a total of 371 images (in J, H, and K bands) of 7.8 sec integration time (8.5 arcmin FOV) were acquired from 2004 Dec 18 10h47m21s to 13h20m33s UT. A preliminary comparison of the central ~8 arcmin surrounding the Swift position with the 2MASS Quicklook catalog image position reveals no new objects to the 2MASS detection level in J-band. A more complete analysis is on-going." More information on the PAIRITEL system may be found at http://pairitel.org. We thank J. Huchra for assistance on the mountain. This message may be cited. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 2855 SUBJECT: GRB041217: P60 Optical Observations DATE: 04/12/18 14:04:30 GMT FROM: S. Bradley Cenko at Caltech S. Bradley Cenko reports on behalf of the Caltech-NRAO-Carnegie GRB Collaboration: "We have imaged the entire 12-arcmin radius error circle of the Swift GRB 041217 with the robotic Palomar 60-inch telescope. Observations consisted of 25 x 120-second exposures in the Gunn g and Kron I filters. High winds led to extremely poor seeing conditions (~ 3-arcsec average). To a limiting magnitude of I~19.5 we detect no new objects by reference to the Digitized Sky Survey (second epoch). Continued analysis and further observations are planned." //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 2856 SUBJECT: GRB041217: NIR and optical observations with REM DATE: 04/12/18 15:02:22 GMT FROM: Gianpiero Tagliaferri at OAB-INAF Testa V., Tosti G., Monfardini A., Covino S., Tagliaferri G., Chincarini G., Zerbi F., Molinari E., Di Paola A., Rodono' M., Antonelli L.A., Conconi P., Cutispoto G., Nicastro L., Palazzi E., on behalf of the REM/ROSS team. We imaged in the NIR and optical bands with the REM 60cm robotic telescope at ESO-La Silla the central field of GRB041217, detected by the Swift Burst Alert Telescope (D. Palmer et al. GCN 2853). The observations were carried out on 2004, December 18, from 05:28 to 06:00 UT (i.e. 22 hours after the burst, as soon as the field was visible from the telescope site), with the REMIR near-IR camera (10x10 arcmin FOV, JHK filters) and with the ROSS spectrograph/imager in the optical (10x10 arcmin FOV, VRI filters). The observations were carried out under good seeing conditions, but with an airmass of about 2. The total exposure times were of J: 600s, H: 600s, K: 300s,V: 120s, R: 120s and I: 120s. The comparison with the 2MASS catalog did not reveal new IR sources at the limit of the catalog. Also the optical observations did not show any plausible candidates. New observation are planned for tonight. This message is citeable. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 2857 SUBJECT: GRB041217: Optical Observations DATE: 04/12/18 15:18:29 GMT FROM: Grant Williams at Steward Observatory G. G. Williams (MMTO), F. Yoshida, T. Ito (National Astronomical Observatory of Japan) We observed a 25 x 25 arcmin area centered on the coordinates of the Swift GRB 041217 (GCN 2853) with the 90prime instrument on the Steward Observatory 90-inch Bok telescope. Two 300s R-band images were obtained beginning on Dec. 18 at 11:55:56 UT. We do not find any new objects down to the limiting magnitude of the DSS. Further analysis and additional observations are planned. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 2859 SUBJECT: GRB 041217: LCO40 Optical Observations and Possible Candidates DATE: 04/12/18 21:01:54 GMT FROM: Edo Berger at Carnegie Obs E. Berger (Carnegie Observatories) and S. Gonzalez (Las Campanas Observatory) report: "We imaged the 12-arcmin radius error circle of GRB 041217 (GCN 2853) with the Swope 40-inch telescope at Las Campanas Observatory starting on December 18.304 (nearly 24 hours after the burst) in r-band for a total of 12 minutes. A comparison to DSS reveals no new bright objects. However, four faint objects close to the detection limit of the DSS are detected with no counterparts in the DSS. We urge other observers to examine their images at the positions of these four candidates: Can-1: RA = 10:58:44.19 DEC= -17:49:34.6 Can-2: RA = 10:59:38.06 DEC= -17:53:02.0 Can-3: RA = 10:59:15.55 DEC= -18:05:35.6 Can-4: RA = 10:59:06.83 DEC= -18:06:58.2 Continued observations are planned." //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 2864 SUBJECT: GRB 041217: PROMPT Observations DATE: 04/12/19 02:02:03 GMT FROM: Melissa Nysewander at UNC,Chapel Hill Matt Bayliss, Melissa Nysewander, Andrew Foster, Dan Reichart, and Jane Moran report on behalf of the U. North Carolina team of the FUN GRB Collaboration: We imaged an 11.7 arcmin x 11.7 arcmin field near the center of the localization of GRB 041217 (Palmer et al., GCN 2853) for 96 x 60 sec in Rc beginning 22.7 hours after the burst with PROMPT Telescope 5 at CTIO. Visual comparison to POSS2-Red reveals no obvious transients, however our image goes deeper. Calibration to 6 USNO-A2.0 stars yields a 3-sigma limiting magnitude of Rc = 21.5 at a mean time of 23.8 hours after the burst for this region. Only the first candidate of Berger & Gonzalez (GCN 2859) would lie in our field, but we find nothing at this location. Our image can be found at: http://www.physics.unc.edu/~mnysewan/grb041217.html PROMPT is very early into construction and commissioning. Enclosure construction began in September 2004: http://www.physics.unc.edu/~evans/promptcam/promptcam.html Construction and commissioning of the first two telescopes began only two and a half days prior to this burst. All six telescopes will be completed and upgraded to 0.41m Ritchey-Chretien telescopes by mid-2005. For more information on PROMPT: http://www.physics.unc.edu/~reichart/prompt.html //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 2926 SUBJECT: GRB 041217: Optical observations DATE: 04/12/30 20:36:44 GMT FROM: Arto Oksanen at Nyrola Obs., Finland D. T. Durig (Cordell-Lorenz Observatory, Sewanee, TN, USA) reports on behalf of the AAVSO International High Energy Network: Observations of the Swift error circle for GRB041217 (Palmer et al., GCN 2853) were made with the Cordell-Lorenz Observatory 0.30m telescope + unfiltered CCD. Eighteen 300-second exposures with UT midpoint of 2004-12-18T10:36 (1.1 days after the burst) and twentythree 300-second exposures with UT midpoint of 2004-12-20T10:26 (3.1 days) were stacked, with limiting sigma-3 magnitudes of 20.0CR and 20.3CR based on USNOA2.0. The 47 arcmin x 47 arcmin field was centered at 10h 59m 53s -17d 51' 45" (J2000.0), covering all of the error circle. No new object is seen down to approximately CR=20.0 when comparing against a DSS2-R image. The four candidates of Berger & Gonzalez (GCN 2859) are visible on both epochs but don't show significant fading. Examing the images of the two epochs gives lower limit for an afterglow about 20.0CR 1.1 days after the burst. The combined FITS images can be found at: ftp://ftp.aavso.org/grb/Dr.DougDurig_GRB041207_2453360.03964_.fits ftp://ftp.aavso.org/grb/Dr.DouglasT.Durig_GRB041217_2453358.03701_.fits The AAVSO International GRB network is greatful for a generous grant from the Curry Foundation and to NASA for the financial support for the High Energy Astrophysics Workshops for Amateur Astronomers.