TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 19140 SUBJECT: GRB 160303A: McDonald 2.1m CQUEAN Detection DATE: 16/03/04 12:34:56 GMT FROM: Soomin Jeong at IAA-CSIC Soomin Jeong (SKKU/IAA-CSIC), Myungshin Im, Changsu Choi and Gu Lim (CEOU/SNU) on behalf of a larger collaboration: We observed the field of GRB160303A (Beardmore et al., GCN 19126) with CQUEAN at the Otto Struve 2.1 m telescope in McDonald Observatory, Texas. The observation started at 11:44, Mar 03 UT (i.e. 0.83 hr post burst) and the observation was conducted in r-, i-, R-, z- band. In the median combined image (5 x 120s) of i-band, a possible counterpart is detected near the centre of XRT enhanced position (Evans et al., GCN 19132). We noticed that our i-band detection is slightly offset from a previously identified position by RATIR (Butler et al., GCN 19131) and found another marginal detection at the RATIR detection, i.e., outskirt of XRT enhanced position (Evans et al., GCN 19132). Faint features are barely detected also in an 5 x 120s, r-band exposure, however the detection error is too big to reveal its reality. It is in relatively outskirt within XRT enhanced error circle and at the previously reported optical position (Butler et al., GCN 19131; Emery et al., GCN 19134). In comparison to other reports, the detection in i-band looks like a fading afterglow (Butler et al., GCN 19131), and the position of the possible object in r-band is coincident to the previous optical detection by RATIR (Butler et al., GCN 19131) and NOT (De Ugarte et al., GCN 19136). The faint r-band source could be the host galaxy or highly contaminated counterpart from the underlying host. The analysis of R- and z-band images is still ongoing. T_mid (hr) Exposure (s) Filter Magnitude (AB) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 0.92 5x120 i 22.54 +/- 0.26 1.13 5x120 r 23.06 +/- 0.41 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The fields are calibrated to a nearby star at RA=168.701176, Dec=22.745212 from SDSS.