TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 1063 SUBJECT: GRB000301C: Late-time HST/STIS observation DATE: 01/05/29 19:48:38 GMT FROM: Andrew S. Fruchter at STScI A. Fruchter and P. Vreeswijk report for a larger collaboration: The field of GRB 000301c was reobserved by the Hubble Space Telescope using the STIS camera in open (50CCD) mode on the 25 Feb 2001, or nearly one year after outburst. Twelve dithered exposures were combined to produce a final image with an exposure time of 7031s. No source is immediately visible at the position of the GRB. However, when the image is convolved with gaussians or boxcars with characteristic sizes from that of the PSF, 0."08, to 0."2, an extended object appears to be visible under the position of the GRB and to its NE. Although extended light from both a nearby bright star, and the larger galaxy to the NW of the GRB make an exact determination of the significance of this object difficult, we believe this is approximately a 3-4 sigma detection. The probable host has an estimated magnitude of R = 28.0 +/- 0.3. This magnitude is just consistent with the estimates of an underlying host from our earlier imaging, GCN 627 and 701. It is, furthermore, about two magnitudes brighter than we would expect the OT to have been at this time, had it continued to decline with a temporal power-law steeper than -2 (c.f. GCN 701 and Rhoads and Fruchter, ApJ 2001, 546, 177). If this is indeed a detection of a host, then in all cases where we have obtained a deep HST image and an OT is well localized (to ~0."1), a host has been found under the GRB. However, again, due to the scattered and extended light in this region of the image, the detection must be considered tentative. The image can be seen at http://www.stsci.edu/~fruchter/GRB/000301C