TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 1029 SUBJECT: GRB 980326: Late-time HST/STIS observations DATE: 01/03/28 19:53:03 GMT FROM: Andrew S. Fruchter at STScI Andrew Fruchter (STScI), Paul Vreeswijk (University of Amsterdam) and Peter Nugent (LBNL) report on behalf of a larger HST GRB collaboration: We observed the field of GRB 980326 with HST/STIS on 31 December 2000, just over 1000 days after the burst. The total exposure time was 7080 seconds in the 50CCD aperture. The images were reduced by the standard HST pipeline, and drizzled to a combined image with a pixelscale of 0."0254. We projected the location of the early afterglow from a KeckII/LRIS R band image, taken by Filippenko, Leonard and Riess on March 27, 1998 (see GCN 33). We estimate the 1-sigma error radius to be less than 1.5 drizzled HST pixels, which includes both the scatter in the transformation (0.9 pixels, using 6 reference stars) and the measurement error of the transient in the Keck image (0.8 pixels). Within one pixel of the estimated position, there was evidence of a small source. We therefore convolved the image with a gaussian with a FWHM equal to that of the PSF (3.5 drizzled pixels). This procedure uses the PSF as a matched filter to enhance the the signal-to-noise ratio of unresolved sources. In the convolved image an object is found, again offset by one pixel from the expected position with a significance of ~4.5 sigma. We estimate a magnitude (in the broad STIS 50ccd filter) of V = 29.25 +/- 0.25. Bloom et al., (1999, Nature, 401, 453) have suggested that the unusual light curve of this GRB might be explained by an underlying supernova, and on the basis of this estimated a redshift of about z~1. A supernova at this redshift (which in this model peaks around a magnitude of 25) would be expected to be significantly fainter than V=29 by now (as would the rapidly decaying GRB afterglow). Therefore, we may be detecting a faint host galaxy. Deep HST images have in all other cases detected a host underlying the GRB, when good astrometry was available for the GRB. If we are observing a host galaxy, then the above magnitude could underestimate its brightness by as much as a few tenths of a magnitude, due to extended emission missed in this measurement. A galaxy at a z~1 with this observed magnitude would lie a rather remarkable 7 magnitudes below L*, the knee of the of the galaxy luminosity function at that redshift. Given the apparent point-source nature of the detected object, and the lack of color information, we cannot exclude the possibility (which we consider remote) that we are observing a light echo, from either the GRB or the supernova. Images of the field can be found at http://www.stsci.edu/~fruchter/GRB/980326