TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 4359 SUBJECT: GRB051211A (=H3979): Refined Analysis DATE: 05/12/16 18:58:27 GMT FROM: Carlo Graziani at U.Chicago N. Kawai, G. Ricker, J-L. Atteia, D. Lamb, and S. Woosley, on behalf of the HETE Science Team; M. Arimoto, T. Donaghy, E. Fenimore, M. Galassi, C. Graziani, N. Ishikawa, A. Kobayashi, J. Kotoku, M. Maetou, M. Matsuoka, Y. Nakagawa, T. Sakamoto, R. Sato, T. Shimokawabe, Y. Shirasaki, S. Sugita, M. Suzuki, T. Tamagawa, K. Tanaka, and A. Yoshida, on behalf of the HETE WXM Team; N. Butler, G. Crew, J. Doty, G. Prigozhin, R. Vanderspek, J. Villasenor, J. G. Jernigan, A. Levine, G. Azzibrouck, J. Braga, R. Manchanda, G. Pizzichini, and S. Gunasekera, on behalf of the HETE Operations and HETE Optical-SXC Teams; M. Boer, J-F Olive, J-P Dezalay, and K. Hurley, on behalf of the HETE FREGATE Team; report: We have analyzed the full FREGATE+WXM+SXC data for HETE trigger H3979 (GRB051211A). Further ground analysis shows that the HETE SXC location for GRB051211A reported in GCN 4324 is reliable. The SXC detected a soft transient source in both the its X and Y cameras about 35 s after the trigger without the assistance of the WXM. The location of this source is: R.A. = 06h 56m 13s ; Dec. = 32d 40' 44" (J2000), with a 90% confidence error radius of 80". The WXM did not detect this soft transient, but it detected hard x-ray emission coincident with the Fregate event. From this hard emission, WXM obtained a solid X location matching the SXC transient. There are several possible WXM Y locations, but one of them matches the SXC transient: the random probability of this is only a few percent. This triple coincidence in time and position gives us high confidence that the SXC transient is associated with the Fregate trigger. The 30-400 keV light curve has a fast rise (<0.1 s) and a slower decay. The burst had a T90 duration of 4.8s in the 6-40 keV band, and of 4.2s in the 30-400 keV band. The integrated spectrum is well-fit by a cutoff power-law function. The best-fit parameters are: alpha = -0.67 --- 90% confidence interval is [-0.90 -0.38] Epeak = 137 keV --- 90% confidence interval is [106 , 200] The 2-30 keV fluence is 1.6e-7 erg/cm2, while the 30-400 keV fluence is 9.6e-7 erg/cm2. This burst had a hardness ratio (100-300 keV fluence)/(25-100 keV fluence) of 1.18. This, along with its 4.2 s T90, places it between the long duration bursts and the short duration bursts in the hardness ratio-duration diagram. We note, however, that if lognormal functions are used to describe the long and short burst duration distributions, this burst appears more likely to belong to the short class. Thus, a search for a possible associated low redshift host galaxy would be of interest. A light curve, hardness ratio-duration diagram, and spectral information for this event are provided at the following URL: http://space.mit.edu/HETE/Bursts/GRB051211/