TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 4500 SUBJECT: GRB 060108: Evidence for an XRT Position Offset DATE: 06/01/13 18:08:21 GMT FROM: Nat Butler at MIT/CSR N. Butler and J. S. Bloom (UC Berkeley) report: We find 34 X-ray sources with S/N>3 in the XRT PC mode data for GRB 060108 (Oates et al., GCN 4443; Page et al. GCN 4444) using wavdetect, neglecting the first observation where the GRB afterglow dominated. The PC mode data from the 2nd through 5th XRT observations have a total effective exposure of 57.8 ksec. Comparing the wavdetect centroids to positions of nearby optical sources detected in SDSS DR4 r-band images (the DR4 data release is described in Adelman-McCarthy et al. 2005; astro-ph/0507711), we note that very few (1 in 34) of the X-ray positions are within 3."4 (the XRT error radius reported by Page et al. GCN 4453) of an optical source. However, 40% of the X-ray sources have optical counterparts in a narrow cluster of displacements to the North-East. This is a reasonable number of associations (e.g., Giacconi, et al. 2001, ApJ, 551, 624), given the depths of the SDSS r-band images (r<~22.2) and the XRT observations (fx>~5x10^-15 erg cm^-2 s^-1). We note that most of the optical counterparts are categorized as galaxies or faint QSOs in the SDSS DR4. Using these optical/X-ray associations and also accounting for the sources with no apparent association, we derive an XRT frame offset of (dRA,dDec) = ( 4.29 , 2.75 ) arcsec, with a 0."7 error (90% conf.). We calculate a refined position for the GRB 060108 X-ray afterglow of: RA = 09h 48m 01.92s ; Dec = +31d 55' 07."8 (J2000), with an uncertainty of 0."9 (90% conf.). The optical - X-ray offsets are plotted at: http://astro.berkeley.edu/~nat/060108/060108_offsets.ps , and http://astro.berkeley.edu/~nat/060108/060108_Xsources.jpg . At this position, we find a faint galaxy in our z-band Gemini imaging (GCN 4475) taken at Jan 10.60 UT. We suggest that this is the host of GRB 060108. An image of the field is posted at: http://astro.berkeley.edu/~jbloom/grb060108-xcorr.ps.gz We urge others with earlier-time imaging to inspect this location in search of an afterglow.