//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 841 SUBJECT: IPN triangulation of GRB001007 DATE: 00/10/10 15:29:42 GMT FROM: Kevin Hurley at UCBerkeley/SSL K. Hurley, on behalf of the Ulysses GRB team, T. Cline, on behalf of the Konus-Wind and NEAR GRB teams, and E. Mazets and S. Golenetskii, on behalf of the Konus-Wind GRB team, report: Ulysses, Konus-Wind, and NEAR observed this burst at 17927 s. As observed by Ulysses, it had a duration of approx. 375 seconds, a 25-100 keV fluence of approx. 3.3E-05 erg/cm2, and a peak flux over 0.5 s of 7.1E-07 erg/cm2 s. We have triangulated it to a preliminary, 3 sigma error box whose area is approx. 40 sq. arcmin. and whose coordinates are: RA(2000) DEC(2000) 4 h 5 m 52.26 s -21 o 54 ' 22.76 " (CENTER) 4 h 5 m 43.95 s -21 o 53 ' 46.46 " (CORNER) 4 h 6 m 21.73 s -21 o 46 ' 23.26 " (CORNER) 4 h 5 m 22.81 s -22 o 2 ' 21.58 " (CORNER) 4 h 6 m 0.58 s -21 o 54 ' 59.04 " (CORNER) This error box may be improved. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 843 SUBJECT: GRB001007: Optical observations DATE: 00/10/10 19:28:27 GMT FROM: Paul Price at RSAA, ANU at CIT P.A. Price, T.S. Axelrod and B.P. Schmidt (RSAA, ANU) report: "We have observed the error box of the long, bright GRB001007 (Hurley et. al., GCN #841) with the robotic 50-inch telescope at Mount Stromlo Observatory with 3 x 300s exposures starting at Oct 10.69 (approximately 3.5 days after the burst). Our images in R_MACHO and B_MACHO cover the entire error box. We detect one object at the centre of the error box for which a counterpart is not visible on the Digital Sky Survey 2. The object is well detected in the MACHO-red frame, and faintly detected in the MACHO-blue frame. This object is located at J2000 coordinates: RA: 04:05:54.29 Dec: -21:53:45.5 Using the star at 04:05:56.44 -21:52:52.96 with assumed R=17.7 (USNO catalogue), the object has R ~ 20.3 mag. No other candidates are detected within the error box. We note that this magnitude may be near the plate limit of the DSS-2, and that an afterglow with this brightness this late after the burst is unusual. Further observations are required to verify if this is the optical transient associated with GRB001007." This message may be cited. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 845 SUBJECT: GRB 001007, BVR-band observations DATE: 00/10/11 10:12:18 GMT FROM: Alberto Castro-Tirado at LAEFF-INTA GRB 001007, BVR-band observations --------------------------------- Alberto J. Castro-Tirado, LAEFF-INTA (Madrid) and IAA-CSIC (Granada) Yves Grosdidier, IAC (Tenerife) Jose Maria Castro Ceron, ROA (San Fernando) Javier Gorosabel, DSRI (Copenhagen) Nicola Caon, IAC (Tenerife) Luz Marina Cairos, IAC (Tenerife) on behalf of a larger European GRB collaboration report: "We have obtained BVR-band images of a 7' x 7' area centred at the GRB 001007 error box (Hurley et al. GCN#841) starting at 03:45 UT on 11 October 2000 with the 0.8m IAC80 telescope at the Spanish Observatorio del Teide. The candidate reported by Price et al. (GCN #843) is clearly detected in the the co-added 4 x 1800-s R-band image. We note that this object is not present at the DSS-2 red plate limit (about R = 21). No other new or variable sources are seen in the frame. The object is also detected in the single 1800-s V-band image, but not in the co-added 2 x 1800-s B-band frames. Using the USNO star quoted in GCN#843, we measure R = 20.28 +/- 0.13 (aperture photometry). This suggests that this source did not fade during the 12 hours elapsed between our exposures and those taken at Mount Stromlo. If this is the GRB optical counterpart, this might resemble the behaviour of GRB 970508 at early epochs (Pedersen et al. 1998, ApJ 496, 311, Castro-Tirado et al. 1998, Sci 279, 1011). An identification chart is posted at: http://www.dsri.dk/~jgu/grb001007/iac80/1007.iac80.gif" This message is quotable. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 860 SUBJECT: GRB001007, Radio observations DATE: 00/10/25 17:35:42 GMT FROM: Edo Berger at Caltech D. A. Frail (NRAO) and E. Berger (Caltech) report on behalf of a larger collaboration: "We used the VLA to observe a field centered at the position of the optical object identified by Price, Axelrod and Schmidt (GCN #843) in the IPN error box of GRB 001007 (GCN #841). Our images, taken on 2000 October 14.28 UT and October 21.43 UT, show an unresolved radio source coincident with the optical source. We measure 8.46 GHz flux densities on these two days of 222 +/- 33 uJy and 101 +/- 28 uJy, respectively. The optical (GCN #843, #845) and radio properties of this object make it a strong candidate for an afterglow. Further observations are planned." This message may be cited. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 862 SUBJECT: GRB001007: Optical observations DATE: 00/10/25 21:30:28 GMT FROM: Paul Price at RSAA, ANU at CIT P.A. Price (Caltech), O. Pevunova, B. Madore (IPAC) and S.G. Djorgovski (Caltech) report on behalf of a larger collaboration: "We have observed the afterglow candidate of GRB001007 (Price et al., GCN #843, Frail & Berger, GCN #860) with the Palomar 60-inch telescope with 4x900s exposures starting at Oct 25.34 UT. We do not detect the candidate to a limiting magnitude of R = 21.6 (based on the reference star from GCN #843, for 50% automated detection of artificial stars in the field). The derived temporal decay slope between our two epochs (Oct 10.69 and Oct 25.34) is alpha > 1.9 ." This message may be cited.