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Published July 1, 1999 | Published + Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Hubble Space Telescope and Palomar Imaging of GRB 990123: Implications for the Nature of Gamma-Ray Bursts and Their Hosts

Abstract

We report on Hubble Space Telescope and Palomar optical images of the field of GRB 990123, obtained in 1999 February 8 and 9. We find that the optical transient (OT) associated with GRB 990123 is located on an irregular galaxy, with a magnitude of V = 24.20 ± 0.15. The strong metal absorption lines seen in the spectrum of the OT, along with the low probability of a chance superposition, lead us to conclude that this galaxy is the host of the gamma-ray burst (GRB). The OT is projected within the ~1'' visible stellar field of the host, nearer the edge than the center. We cannot, on this basis, rule out the galactic nucleus as the site of the GRB, since the unusual morphology of the host may be the result of an ongoing galactic merger, but our demonstration that this host galaxy has extremely blue optical-to-infrared colors more strongly supports an association between GRBs and star formation. We find that the OT magnitude in 1999 February 9.05, V = 25.45 ± 0.15, is about 1.5 mag fainter than expected from the extrapolation of the decay rate found in earlier observations. A detailed analysis of the OT light curve suggests that its fading has gone through three distinct phases: an early, rapid decline (f_ν ∝ t^(-1.6) for t < 0.1 days); a slower, intermediate decline power-law decay (f_ν ∝ t^(-1.1) for 0.1 < t < 2 days); and then a more rapid decay (at least as steep as f_ν ∝ t^(-1.8) for t > 2 days). The break to a steeper slope at late times may provide evidence that the optical emission from this GRB was highly beamed.

Additional Information

© 1999 The American Astronomical Society. Received 1999 February 17; accepted 1999 April 28; published 1999 June 2. We wish to thank Steven Beckwith, the Director of STScI, for using director's discretionary time to observe GRB 990123 and for making the data public. We also thank Jen Christensen for assistance in creating appropriate STIS dark files. Note that the reduced HST images discussed in this Letter can be retrieved in FITS format at http://www.stsci.edu/˜fruchter/GRB/990123.

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Published - Fruchter_1999_ApJ_519_L13.pdf

Accepted Version - 9902236.pdf

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August 19, 2023
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