//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3942 SUBJECT: GRB 050908: Swift detection of a burst DATE: 05/09/08 06:28:38 GMT FROM: Hans Krimm at NASA-GSFC M. Goad (U. Leicester), H. Krimm (GSFC/USRA), D. Burrows (PSU), M. Chester (PSU), N. Gehrels (GSFC), C. Markwardt (GSFC/UMD), J. Osborne (U. Leicester), C. Pagani (PSU), K. Page (U. Leicester), D. Palmer (LANL), A. Parsons (GSFC) on behalf of the Swift team: At 05:42:31 UT, Swift-BAT triggered and located GRB050908 (trigger=154112). The BAT on-board calculated location is RA,Dec 20.464, -12.971 {01h 21m 51s, -12d 58' 16"} (J2000), with an uncertainty of 3 arcmin (radius, 90% containment, stat+sys). The BAT light curve shows a roughly triangular shape with a possible two peaks and total duration of ~25 seconds. The peak count rate is ~1000 cts/sec. The S/C slewed immediately and the XRT began observations at 05:44:18 UT, T+106.2 seconds. The instrument was not able to calculate an on-board centroid. No bright source was initially apparent, but the initial lightcurve suggests that a source in the field of view may have brightened and then decayed in the first few minutes of the observation. Further analysis will require processing of the full telemetry data following the next ground station contact. The UVOT began observations at 05:44:15.6. Further analysis will require processing of the full telemetry data following the next ground station contact. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3943 SUBJECT: GRB 050908: Optical Observations DATE: 05/09/08 07:05:56 GMT FROM: Ken ichi Torii at RIKEN K. Torii (Osaka U.) reports: "The error region of GRB 050908 (Goad et al. GCN 3942) was observed by the 0.30 m telescope in the New Mexico Sky Observatory. Several 120 s exposures were obtained in V, Rc, and Ic bands starting at 05:56:25 UT (14 minutes after the burst). We identify a low significance optical counterpart candidate at R.A. 01:21:50.7 Dec. -12:57:16 (J2000, 1".5 uncertainty) with an USNO-A2.0R magnitude of about 18.8." //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3944 SUBJECT: GRB 050908: P60 Confirmation of Optical Afterglow DATE: 05/09/08 07:51:12 GMT FROM: S. Bradley Cenko at Caltech S. Bradley Cenko (Caltech), Derek B. Fox (Penn State), and Edo Berger (Carnegie Observatories) report on behalf of a larger collaboration: We have imaged the error circle of GRB 050908 (Swift 154112, GCN 3942, Goad et al.) with the automated Palomar 60-inch Telescope. The optical candidate identified by Torii (GCN 3943) is detected in our images, and shows clear signs of fading. Approximately 22 minutes after the burst, the afterglow has faded to a magnitude of R ~ 19.4 +/- 0.3 (based on a comparison with the Guide Star Catalog). We therefore confirm this object is the afterglow of GRB 050908. Further observations are planned. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3945 SUBJECT: GRB 050908: KAIT observations DATE: 05/09/08 08:05:51 GMT FROM: Weidong Li at UC Berkeley KAIT/LOSS W. Li, University of California, Berkeley, on behalf of the KAIT GRB team, report: "We remotely observed GRB 050908 (Swift Trigger #154112; Goad et al. GCN GCN 3942) with the 0.76-m Katzman Automatic Imaging Telescope (KAIT) at Lick Observatory, and identified a fading object at the position R. A. = 01:21:50.75 DEC. = -12:57:17.2 (J2000, 0.3" uncertainty) which is probably the same object as reported by Torii (GCN 3943). The object is at magnitude about 20.1 (unfiltered; calibrated via the USNO-B1.0 catalog) in a 600 s unfiltered image started at 06:36:24 UT, 3233s after the bust. This message may be cited. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3946 SUBJECT: GRB 050908 : Swift XRT position DATE: 05/09/08 08:20:39 GMT FROM: Michael Goad at U Leicester M. Goad (UL), C. Pagani (PSU), K. Page (UL) and D. Burrows (PSU) report on behalf of the Swift XRT team: We have analysed the ground data from GRB 050908 (BAT Trigger #154112). We find a previously uncatalogued, X-ray source at the following coordinates: RA(J2000): 01 21 50.3 Dec(J2000): -12 57 20.3 with an uncertainty of 6 arcseconds radius (90% containment). This position is 56.6 arcseconds from the BAT position reported in GCN 3942 (Goad et al.) and 7.3 arseconds from the optical counterpart reported in GCN 3943 (Torii). //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3947 SUBJECT: GRB 050908: Prompt PROMPT Observations DATE: 05/09/08 08:35:27 GMT FROM: Daniel E. Reichart at U.North Carolina J. Kirschbrown, C. MacLeod, D. Reichart, M. Nysewander, A. Crain, A. Foster, A. LaCluyze report on behalf of the UNC team of the FUN GRB Collaboration. Under the control of Skynet, PROMPT automatically observed the localization of GRB 050908 (Goad et al., GCN 3942) beginning 50 sec after the burst in repeating blocks of BVRcIc (two filters simultaneously). We detect the afterglow (Torii, GCN 3943) and measure its brightness to be Rc ~ 19 mag at 20 min after the burst. PROMPT is still being built and commissioned. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3948 SUBJECT: GRB 050908: spectroscopic redshift DATE: 05/09/08 09:30:59 GMT FROM: Daniele Malesani at SISSA-ISAS,Trieste,Italy D. Fugazza (INAF/OABr), F. Fiore (INAF/OARm), F. Patat, C. Ledoux (ESO), P. D'Avanzo (INAF/OABr), L.A. Antonelli (INAF/OARm), G. Chincarini (INAF/OABr & Univ. Milano-Bicocca), D. Malesani (SISSA/ISAS), S. Covino, G. Tagliaferri (INAF/OABr), S. Piranomonte and L. Stella (INAF/OArm), report on behalf of the MISTICI collaboration: We observed the optical afterglow (Torii, GCN 3943; Cenko, Fox & Berger, GCN 3944) of GRB 050908 (Goad et al., GCNs 3942, 3946) with the ESO-VLT UT2, equipped with the FORS1 instrument. Spectroscopy was performed with the grism 300V, covering the wavelength range 4500-8500 AA. Twenty minutes of exposure were acquired starting on 2005 Sep 8, 07:19 UT. Data reduction was performed using archivial calibration files, so that small systematic uncertainties may be present in our analysis. Based on the detection of Lyalpha, SiIV1309,1402, CIV1548,1550, SiII1206, and the Lyman limit, we measure a redshift z = 3.350 +- 0.005. Further analysis is in progress and results will be communicated later. We acknowledge the outstanding support received from the ESO staff. This message can be cited. [GCN OPS NOTE(10sep05): Per author's request, "N. Patat" was changed to "F. Patat".] //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3949 SUBJECT: Gemini Spectroscopy of GRB 050908 DATE: 05/09/08 14:31:28 GMT FROM: Ryan Foley at UC Berkeley R. J. Foley (UCB), H.-W. Chen (UChicago), J. S. Bloom (UCB), and Jason X. Prochaska (UCO/Lick Observatory) report: "We obtained 2x1200 sec dithered exposures of the optical candidate (GCN 3943) of GRB 050908 using GMOS on the Gemini-North telescope with the B600 grating. The observations started at 20050908.39 UT (~ 4 hrs after the initial Swift trigger). We measure a redshift of z = 3.3437 +/- 0.0002 based on a series of absorption features due to HI 1215, SiIII 1206, SiII 1260, SiIV 1393, 1402, and CIV 1548, 1550. We also observe a flux discontinuity at 5285.9 Ang at the onset of the Lya forest absorption from the intergalactic medium. Our redshift measurement is somewhat lower than but still consistent with the redshift of 3.350 +/- 0.005 reported by Fugazza et al. (GCN 3948). Using the HI 1215 absorption line, we estimate a neutral hydrogen column density of log N(HI) ~ 19.2. In addition to this system, which we contend is the redshift of the host galaxy, we see several other, intervening systems at z = 2.81 and 3.039. The system at z = 2.81 is particularly interesting. It shows CIII 1909 and CIV 1549 emission." //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3950 SUBJECT: GRB 050908: Optical observations DATE: 05/09/08 14:59:10 GMT FROM: Arto Oksanen at Nyrola Obs., Finland D. T. Durig, N. P. McLarty and J. R. Manning (Cordell-Lorenz Observatory) report on behalf of the AAVSO International High Energy Network on optical observations of GRB050908 (GCN #3942; Goad et al.): The optical afterglow reported by K. Torii (GCN #3943) was detected and its fading behaviour was confirmed with observations starting 14 minutes after the Swift trigger. Full details and URL to the FITS image are below. The AAVSO thanks the Curry Foundation for support of the AAVSO International High Energy Network. Report filed on Thu Sep 8 06:22:58 2005: Name: Dr. Douglas T. Durig email: ddurig@sewanee.edu Observer: D. T. Durig, N. P. McLarty, J. R. Manning Site: Cordell-Lorenz Observatory Location: Sewanee, Tenn., USA LatitudeLongitude: 35 12 N 85 55 W Elevation: 600 m Scope: SCT 0.30 m ScopeFocalRatio: 1770 mm f/5.9 CCDVendor: SBIG ST-8E CCDDetector: KAF 1600 CCDSize: 1530x1020, binned 3x3 CCDPixelScale: 3.15 arc sec CCDFOV: 26.7 x 17.8 arc min/13.35x8.9 shown Object: GRB050908 ObsDate: 2005 09 08 ObsMidPointTime: 07:59:09 TimePerFrame: 300 sec NumberOfFrames: 48 Filters: CR Processing: dark, flat, register, add, 1/2 frame crop Seeing: ~5 arc sec LimitingMag: ~21.5-22 ??? Sky: mostly clear, occasional high clouds, no wind afterglowmag: 19th fading to 21st afterglowerr: 0.3 mag compstars: 310 USNO B1.0 stars in field Report: I had to use my backup CCD because my primary is in for repair. I started imaging at 05:56:39 ( 2453621.7477 JD ) and did 30 x 300 sec exposures followed by an additional 18. I was analysing the first 10 and had identified the potential candidate on my own. I was checking the fading behaviour when GCN 3943 from Torii announced the same candidate. I then used my first 20 frames added in sets of 5 to confirm clear fading behaviour: 8.25483 01 21 50.72 -12 57 17.4 19.3 R 8.27272 01 21 50.73 -12 57 17.0 19.8 R 8.29063 01 21 50.69 -12 57 17.1 20.4 R 8.30853 01 21 50.79 -12 57 17.0 21.0 R I then used sets of 10 and 20 to get later data points for the full set of images. Full data set: 08.25483 01 21 50.72 -12 57 17.4 19.3 R 850 08.26378 01 21 50.72 -12 57 17.2 19.6 R 850 08.27272 01 21 50.73 -12 57 17.0 19.8 R 850 08.28168 01 21 50.71 -12 57 17.2 19.9 R 850 08.29063 01 21 50.69 -12 57 17.1 20.4 R 850 08.29958 01 21 50.67 -12 57 17.8 20.7 R 850 08.33539 01 21 50.73 -12 57 15.8 20.2 R 850 08.35454 01 21 50.69 -12 57 16.9 21.0 R 850 08.37369 01 21 50.64 -12 57 18.1 21.4 R 850 A FITS image has been uploaded to: ftp://ftp.aavso.org/grb/Dr.DouglasT.Durig_GRB050908_2453621.93262_.fits //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3951 SUBJECT: GRB 050908: Swift-BAT refined analysis DATE: 05/09/08 15:27:17 GMT FROM: Hans Krimm at NASA-GSFC G. Sato (ISAS), L. Barbier (GSFC), S. Barthelmy (GSFC), P. Boyd (GSFC/UMBC), J. Cummings (GSFC/NRC), D. Hullinger (GSFC/UMD), E. Fenimore (LANL), N. Gehrels (GSFC), H. Krimm (GSFC/USRA), C. Markwardt (GSFC/UMD), D. Palmer (LANL), A. Parsons (GSFC), T. Sakamoto (GSFC/NRC), J. Tueller (GSFC), W. Voges (MPE), on behalf of the Swift-BAT team: Using the data set from T-60 to T+120 sec from the recent telemetry downlink, we report further analysis of Swift-BAT GRB 050908 (trigger #154112) (Goad, et al., GCN 3942). The refined BAT ground position is (RA,Dec) = 20.451,-12.962 {01h 21m 48s, -12d 57' 45"} [deg; J2000] +- 1.6 arcmin, (radius, 90% containment, statistical plus systematic). This is 35 arcsec from the optical position reported by the KAIT GRB team in Li et al. 2005, GCN 3945. The partial coding was 80%. The mask-weighted BAT light curve shows a roughly triangular shape with a single peak rising from T-8 sec to peak at T+2 sec and return to background levels at T+15 sec. The duration T90 (15-350 keV) is 20 +/- 2 sec. (estimated error including systematics). There is an indication of hard to soft spectral evolution. The soft emission decays more slowly and in fact the duration in the 50-300 keV band is T90 = 7 +/- 1 seconds. The power law index of the time-averaged spectrum fit over T-10.3 to T+15.4 sec is 1.93 +- 0.17. The fluence in the 15-150 keV band is (5.1 +/- 0.5) x 10^-7 erg/cm2. The 1-s peak photon flux measured from T+1.66 sec to T+2.66 sec in the 15-150 keV band is (0.7 +/- 0.1) ph/cm2/s. All the quoted errors are at the 90% confidence level. Given the measured redshift for this burst, z=3.35 (Fugazza et al., GCN 3948; Foley et al., GCN 3949) and assuming a cosmology with Omega_M = 0.3, Omega_lamda = 0.7, H0 = 65, we derive Eiso for this burst of 1.36 x 10^52 ergs in 65.25 - 652.50 keV at the GRB rest frame. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3952 SUBJECT: GRB050908 : Swift-XRT refined analysis DATE: 05/09/08 17:41:45 GMT FROM: Michael Goad at U Leicester M. Goad (UL), K. Page (UL), D. Burrows (PSU) report on behalf of the Swift XRT team: We have analysed the XRT data for GRB050908 (BAT trigger 154112), between 118s and 24000 s after the trigger. As previously reported by Goad et al. (GCN3946), there is an uncatalogued fading X-ray source in the field of view. The refined coordinates for this burst are RA(J2000) : 01 21 50.38 Dec(J2000): -12 57 19.89 with an uncertainty of 6 arcseconds (90% containment). This is 43 arcseconds from the refined BAT position (GCN3951) and 6 arcseconds from the position of the candidate optical counterpart (GCN3943). The initial lightcurve displays 2 large flares with approximately equal amplitude peaking at T0+145 s and T0+397 s. The spectrum of the burst in the first orbit of data is well fit by a single powerlaw with photon index 3.9 +1.1/-0.5 (0.3-10 keV), with evidence for excess column above the Galactic value of 2.1e20 cm^-2 of NH~3e20 cm^-2. The spectrum of the burst from T0+4200 to T0+24000 s appears to be harder with a powerlaw slope of 2.0 +/-0.6. After the flares the light-curve declines with a slope of -1.33. If the light-curve continues to decline at this rate the predicted count-rate at 24 hours after the burst is 5.3e-4 ct s^-1, corresponding to a 0.3-10 keV unabsorbed flux of 3.3e-14 erg cm^-2 s^-1. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3953 SUBJECT: GRB050908: VLT R-band decay index. DATE: 05/09/08 18:09:26 GMT FROM: Angelo Antonelli at Obs. Astro. di Roma S. Piranomonte, L. Calzoletti (INAF/OAR), P. D'Avanzo (INAF/OABr), L.A. Antonelli (INAF/OAR), F. Patat, C. Ledoux (ESO), D. Malesani (SISSA/ISAS), G. Chincarini (INAF/OABr & Univ. Milano-Bicocca), S. Covino, D. Fugazza, G. Tagliaferri(INAF/OABr), F. Fiore and L. Stella (INAF/OAR), report on behalf of the MISTICI collaboration: "We observed the optical afterglow (Torii, GCN 3943; Cenko, Fox & Berger, GCN 3944) of GRB 050908 (Goad et al., GCNs 3942, 3946) with the ESO-VLT UT2, equipped with the FORS1 instrument. R-band observations were performed in Rapid Response Mode (RRM) on Sep 8.268 UT and as a ToO on Sept 8.415 UT (42 and 255 minutes after the GRB respectively). During the two epoch observations the afterglow decays as a power law having decay index of -0.93+/-0.05. This message may be cited" [GCN OPS NOTE(10sep05): Per author's request, "N. Patat" was changed to "F. Patat".] //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3954 SUBJECT: GRB050908: Swift/UVOT Early upper limits DATE: 05/09/08 18:51:53 GMT FROM: Massimiliano de Pasquale at MSSL-UCL M. De Pasquale (MSSL), M. Goad (U. Leicester), F. Marshall (GSFC), J. Norris(GSFC), K. Hurley (Berkeley), N. Gehrels, on behalf of the Swift/UVOT team The Swift/UVOT began observing the field of GRB050908 at 05:44:15 UT, 104 seconds after the BAT trigger (Goad et al., GCN 3942). No new source with respect to the DSS was detected in the initial 100 s V-band UVOT image with a significance of 3 sigma at the position of the optical afterglow found by Torii et al. (GCN 3943). The corresponding 3 sigma upper limit is 18.8. There was also no optical/UV counterpart detected in the summed images from all filters, down to the following 3 sigma magnitude upper limits: Filter T_range(s) Exp (s) 3sig UL V 104-6922 942 19.9 B 250-5254 1020 21.1 U 236-1098 190 19.5 UVW1 223-993 100 19.1 UVM2 208-11040 987 20.9 UVW2 265-6163 997 20.6 Where T_range is the time post-trigger over which the summed images were accumulated and Exp is the total exposure time. The magnitudes upper limits are not corrected for extinction. These magnitudes are based on preliminary zero- points, measured in orbit, and will require refinements with further calibrations. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3957 SUBJECT: WIRO observations in I of GRB 050908 DATE: 05/09/09 19:28:11 GMT FROM: Chris Rodgers at U of Wyoming D. Dale, R. Barlow, C. Paul, C. Rodgers, D. Allen, R. Canterna, M. Pierce report on behalf of the Wyoming Infrared Observatory GRB Team as part of the FUN GRB Collaboration. We responded to GRB 050908 (GCN 3942) at 07:40:25 UT with a 2 minute I exposure and at 10:25:35 UT with a 4 minute I exposure centered on the position of the original Swift-BAT GRB Position under 1.5 arcsecond photometric conditions. The source was detected in the 2 minute I exposure in the same position reported by GCN 3943 (Torii et al.). Zero points were calculated using the USNO B1.0 catalogue. UT Time Since Filter Magnitude 07:40:25 1:57:54 I 18.410 +/- 0.128 The source was no longer detected in the 4 minute I exposure. UT Time Since Filter Limiting Magnitude 10:25:35 4:43:04 I 18.620 10 sigma limiting magnitude were derived from the USNO-B1.0 catalogue. This message may be cited. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3958 SUBJECT: RBO GRB 050908 observations DATE: 05/09/09 19:43:34 GMT FROM: Chris Rodgers at U of Wyoming D. Allen, C. Rodgers, R. Canterna (U. of Wyoming) report on behalf of the Red Buttes Observatory (0.6m) GRB Team as part of the FUN GRB Collaboration. We responded to GRB 050908 (GCN 3942) at 08:01:52 UT with a 10 minute I exposure centered on the position of the original Swift-BAT GRB Position under 3.9 arcsecond differential conditions. The source was not detected in the 10 minute I exposure in the same position reported by GCN 3943 (Torii et al.) due to our detection limits. UT Time Since Filter Limiting Magnitude 08:01:52 2:19:21 I 16.056 10 sigma limiting magnitude were derived from the USNO-B1.0 catalogue. This message may be cited. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3960 SUBJECT: GRB050908: detection of Swift/UVOT optical counterpart DATE: 05/09/10 21:09:41 GMT FROM: Alexander Blustin at MSSL-UCL M. De Pasquale (UCL-MSSL), M. Goad (U. Leicester), A. J. Blustin (UCL-MSSL), M. Chester (PSU), L. Angelini (GSFC-JHU), N. Gehrels (GSFC) on behalf of the Swift/UVOT team Further analysis of the early Swift/UVOT data for GRB050908 (Goad et al., GCN 3942) reveals a faint, decaying source at the position of the optical counterpart reported by Torii (GCN 3943). In summed V-band images taken between 104-650 s after the trigger, a source is visible at 19.3 +/0.1 mag in a total exposure time of 149 s. It is not detected in data taken later than this; in summed V-band images from 700-40650 s post-trigger a 3-sigma upper limit of 20.5 mag is obtained at the same position in 2296 s of co-added exposure time. The source is only detected in the V band. These magnitudes are uncorrected for extinction and are based on preliminary zero-points, measured in orbit, and will require refinement with further calibration. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 3971 SUBJECT: GRB 050908: DEIMOS spectrum and further analysis DATE: 05/09/12 17:39:33 GMT FROM: Jason Prochaska at UCO/Lick Obs J. X. Prochaska (UCO-Lick/UCSC), R. J. Foley (UCB), H.-W. Chen (U Chichago), J. S. Bloom (UCB), K. Hurley (SSL/UCB), M. Cooper (UCB), R. Guhathakurta (UCO-Lick/UCSC), W. Li (UCB) report on behalf of the GRAASP collaboration: "We have obtained Keck/DEIMOS spectra of the afterglow of 050908 starting at 20050908.56 UT. The 1200/7500 grating data has a resolution of ~0.33 Ang and S/N~10 per resolution element covering wavelengths 6300-9000 Ang. We refine the GRB host redshift to be z=3.3440 +/- 0.0001 based on the strongest component of the CIV profile. The DEIMOS spectrum overlaps with GMOS spectrum between 6330 and 7950 A, and does not confirm the emission feature originally detected in the GMOS data at 7273 A. We therefore conclude that the intervening system at z=2.81 reported in GCN 3949 is not likely to be real. Adopting log N(HI)=19 and ignoring ionization corrections, the non-detections of CII 1334, OI 1302 and AlII 1670 imply a metallicity of less than 1/100 solar. Ionization corrections could imply even 10x lower values. In contrast to the low-ion transitions, the host shows very strong SiIV and CIV absorption spanning ~500 km/s." This message may be cited. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 4049 SUBJECT: GRB050908: optical observations DATE: 05/10/01 00:08:49 GMT FROM: Alexei Pozanenko at IKI, Moscow D. Sharapov, G. Abdullaeva, M. Ibrahimov (MAO), A.Pozanenko (IKI) on behalf of larger GRB follow up collaboration report: We observed the error box of GRB050908 (Goad et al, GCN 3942) with 1.5m telescope of Maidanak Astronomical Observatory. Set of R images were taken between Sep.8 (UT) 21:28 - 22:04. The OT found by Torii (GCN 3943) is clearly visible in a stacked image. Preliminary photometry of the stacked image against of USNO A2.0 is following: Mid time, Exposure, Filter, Mag. (UT) (s) Sep.08 21:46 6x300 R 21.88 +/- 0.25 The stacked image can be found in http://grb.rssi.ru/GRB050908/. The message may be cited.