Bibcode
Castro Cerón, J. M.; Gorosabel, J.; Castro-Tirado, A. J.; Sokolov, V. V.; Afanasiev, V. L.; Fatkhullin, T. A.; Dodonov, S. N.; Komarova, V. N.; Cherepashchuk, A. M.; Postnov, K. A.; Lisenfeld, U.; Greiner, J.; Klose, S.; Hjorth, J.; Fynbo, J. P. U.; Pedersen, H.; Rol, E.; Fliri, J.; Feldt, M.; Feulner, G.; Andersen, M. I.; Jensen, B. L.; Pérez Ramírez, M. D.; Vrba, F. J.; Henden, A. A.; Israelian, G.; Tanvir, N. R.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, v.424, p.833-839 (2004)
Advertised on:
9
2004
Journal
Citations
9
Refereed citations
9
Description
We present optical and NIR (near infrared) follow up observations of the
GRB 001109 from 1 to 300 days after the burst. No
transient emission was found at these wavelengths within this GRB's
(Gamma Ray Burst) 50 arcsec radius BeppoSAX error box. Strong limits
(3σ) are set with: R ⪆ 21, 10.2 h after the GRB; I ⪆ 23,
11.4 h after the GRB; H ⪆ 20.7, 9.9 h after the GRB; and
KS⪆ 20, 9.6 h after the GRB. We discuss whether the radio
source found in the GRB's error box (cite{taylor00}) might be related
to the afterglow. We also present a multiwavelength study of a reddened
starburst galaxy, found coincident with the potential radio and the
X-ray afterglow. We show that our strong I band upper limit makes of the
GRB 001109 the darkest one localised by the
BeppoSAX's NFI (Narrow Field Instrument), and it is one of the most
constraining upper limits on GRB afterglows to date. Further to it, the
implications of these observations in the context of dark GRBs are
considered.
Based on observations made with telescopes at the Centro
Astronómico Hispano Alemán (1.23 m + 3.50 m), at the
Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos (NOT + WHT), at the United
States Naval Observatory (1.00 m) and at the Russian Academy of
Sciences's Special Astrophysical Observatory (6.05 m). The NOT is
operated on the island of San Miguel de la Palma jointly by Denmark,
Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden, in Spain's Observatorio del Roque
de los Muchahos of the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias. The
Centro Astronómico Hispano Alemán is operated in Calar
Alto by the Max-Planck Institut für Astronomie of Heidelberg,
jointly with Spain's Comisión Nacional de Astronomía.