Prompt, early, and afterglow optical observations of five gamma-ray bursts (GRBs 100901A, 100902A, 100905A, 100906A, and 101020A)
E. S. Gorbovskoy (1), G. V. Lipunova (1), V. M. Lipunov (1), V. G., Kornilov (1), A. A. Belinski (1), N. I. Shatskiy (1), N. V. Tyurina (1), D., A. Kuvshinov (1), P. V. Balanutsa (1), V. V. Chazov (1), A. Kuznetsov (1), D., S. Zimnukhov (1), M. V. Kornilov (1)

TL;DR
This study presents early optical observations of five GRBs, detecting optical counterparts for two, analyzing their light curves and spectra, and discussing implications for the origins of prompt optical emission.
Contribution
First simultaneous early optical observations of five GRBs with detailed analysis of two, revealing different origins of prompt optical emission and testing spectral and energetic relations.
Findings
Optical counterparts detected for GRB 100901A and 100906A.
GRB 100906A's optical light curve suggests prompt emission from a front shock.
GRB 100906A satisfies Amati and Ghirlanda relations.
Abstract
We present results of the prompt, early, and afterglow optical observations of five gamma-ray bursts, GRBs 100901A, 100902A, 100905A, 100906A, and 101020A, made with the Mobile Astronomical System of TElescope-Robots in Russia (MASTER-II net), the 1.5-m telescope of Sierra-Nevada Observatory, and the 2.56-m Nordic Optical Telescope. For two sources, GRB 100901A and GRB 100906A, we detected optical counterparts and obtained light curves starting before cessation of gamma-ray emission, at 113 s and 48 s after the trigger, respectively. Observations of GRB 100906A were conducted with two polarizing filters. Observations of the other three bursts gave the upper limits on the optical flux; their properties are briefly discussed. More detailed analysis of GRB 100901A and GRB 100906A supplemented by Swift data provides the following results and indicates different origins of the prompt optical…
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