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: http://www.stsci.edu/~fruchter/GRB/990123/
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On this page we present the Hubble Space Telescope images of GRB 990123. The Gamma-Ray Burst of January 23, 1999 was first located by the Beppo-Sax satellite. Most remarkably, an optical transient (OT) associated with the GRB was detected only ~25 seconds after the start of the burst by the ROTSE camera at Los Alamos. The optical emission peaked about 45 seconds after the start of the burst, at a visual magnitude of about 9. Optical spectra taken at the W.M. Keck Observatory and the Nordic Optical Telescope revealed absorption lines corresponding to a redshift of z=1.6. A complete list of notices sent out to the Gamma Ray Burst community on this object can be found in the GCN Archive.
HST has observed GRB 990123 on four occasions. In the first three cases, the observations were performed using the STIS CCD camera in with no filter (clear/50CCD mode). In the last case (a year and a half after outburst) the observation was with the LP (long pass) filter. The first observation, on 8 February 1999, was performed by the Director of HST, Steven Beckwith, as a service to the astronomical community. The data were made available immediately to the public, and were reduced by various groups. The image made by the HST GRB Collaboration HST GRB Collaboration, using this data, is shown on the left above. The OT, the point source at the center of the image, is seen to be superposed on an irregular galaxy, which could perhaps be an interacting system. A wider field-of-view image is shown at the bottom of this page. By the time that the first HST image was taken the OT had faded to V=25.4 +/- 0.1, or by a factor of about 4 million since its peak. Our paper on the results of these observations, including both the behavior of the OT and the nature of the host galaxy have been published in the Astrophysical Journal. If you or your Institution does not have a subscription to the Ap. J., you can obtain the paper from the LANL preprint server.
The second and third sets of observations, on 23 March 1999, and 7 February 2000 were obtained by the HST GRB Collaboration as part of our Cycle 8 Target of Opportunity program. We find that the OT has faded to V=27.7 +/- 0.15 by the time of the 23 March 99 observation. The OT is not visible above the galactic background in the 7 February image. The images below show the images from the first two epochs on the left and the difference image between each image and the last epoch on the right. The fourth and most recent observation, on the 15 June 2000, was using the LP (long-pass) filter as part of a public survey of a number of GRB hosts. By this time the OT has faded to insiginificance. However, the LP filter, which only passes light longward of ~5500 Angstroms provides some color information when compared with the open mode (50CCD) image.
A color image of the host of GRB 990123. The LP image is used as
red. All of the 50CCD data has been
combined (with the OT removed from two of the datasets) to produce the green.
A scaled subtraction of the 50CCD and LP images is used for the blue.
Again, while the whole galaxy is relatively blue, the OT does not fall on one
of its bluest
regions. This image reproduces best on the standard monitor settings
of a PC. Sun users may find it improved by increasing their monitor's
brightness setting to the highest level.
The March 1999 and February 2000 drizzled images will be made available shortly.
If you use the reduced FITS images provided on this page in any publication, we ask that you reference the paper "HST and Palomar Imaging of GRB 990123: Implications for the Nature of Gamma-Ray Bursts and their Hosts" (Fruchter et al., 1999, the Astrophysical Journal, Volume 519, page L519) as the source of the images.