5 research outputs found
Search for X-ray Afterglows from Gamma-Ray Bursts in the RASS
We report on a search for X-ray afterglows from gamma-ray bursts using the
ROSAT all-sky survey (RASS) data. If the emission in the soft X-ray band is
significantly less beamed than in the gamma-ray band, we expect to detect many
afterglows in the RASS. Our search procedure generated 23 afterglow candidates,
where about 4 detections are predicted. Follow-up spectroscopy of several
counterpart candidates strongly suggests a flare star origin of the RASS events
in many, if not all, cases. Given the small number of events we conclude that
the data are consistent with comparable beaming angles in the X-ray and
gamma-ray bands. Models predicting a large amount of energy emerging as a
nearly isotropic X-ray component, and a so far undetected class of ``dirty
fireballs'' and re-bursts are constrained.Comment: 5 pages, LATEX with aipproc.sty, incl. 1 ps-Fig., Proc. of the 5th
Huntsville Gamma Ray Burst Symposium, Oct. 1999, ed. R.M. Kippen, AIP; also
available at http://www.aip.de/~jcg/publis.htm
Strategies for prompt searches for GRB afterglows: the discovery of the GRB 001011 optical/near-infrared counterpart using colour-colour selection
We report the discovery of the optical and near-infrared counterparts to GRB
001011. The GRB 001011 error box determined by Beppo-SAX was simultaneously
imaged in the near-infrared by the 3.58-m New Technology Telescope and in the
optical by the 1.54-m Danish Telescope ~8 hr after the gamma-ray event. Here we
implement the colour-colour discrimination technique proposed by Rhoads (2001)
and extend it using near-IR data as well. We present the results provided by an
automatic colour-colour discrimination pipe-line developed to discern the
different populations of objects present in the GRB 001011 error box. Our
software revealed three candidates based on single-epoch images. Second-epoch
observations carried out ~3.2 days after the burst revealed that the most
likely candidate had faded, thus identifying it with the counterpart to the
GRB. In deep R-band images obtained 7 months after the burst a faint
(R=25.38+/-0.25) elongated object, presumably the host galaxy of GRB 001011,
was detected at the position of the afterglow. The GRB 001011 afterglow is the
first discovered with the assistance of colour-colour diagram techniques. We
discuss the advantages of using this method and its application to error boxes
determined by future missions.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics, 13 pages, 16
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