The optical identifcation of events with poorly defined locations: The case of the Fermi GBM GRB140801A
V. M. Lipunov, J. Gorosabel, M. V. Pruzhinskaya, A. de Ugarte Postigo,, V. Pelassa, A. E. Tsvetkova, I. V. Sokolov, D.A. Kann, Dong Xu, E. S., Gorbovskoy, V. V. Krushinski, V. G. Kornilov, P. V. Balanutsa, S. V., Boronina, N. M. Budnev, Z. Cano, A. J. Castro-Tirado, V. V. Chazov

TL;DR
This paper reports the rapid optical detection and analysis of GRB 140801A's afterglow within a large Fermi GBM error box, demonstrating the effectiveness of automated robotic observatories in identifying GRB counterparts.
Contribution
It presents the first optical afterglow detection of a GRB solely from Fermi GBM localization and highlights the importance of automated rapid-response telescopes for large error-box GRB follow-up.
Findings
Fast optical detection 53 seconds after alert
Redshift measurement of z=1.32
Consistent with Amati relation and Ghirlanda limit
Abstract
We report the early discovery of the optical afterglow of gamma-ray burst (GRB) 140801A in the 137 deg 3- error-box of the Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM). MASTER is the only observatory that automatically react to all Fermi alerts. GRB 140801A is one of the few GRBs whose optical counterpart was discovered solely from its GBM localization. The optical afterglow of GRB 140801A was found by MASTER Global Robotic Net 53 sec after receiving the alert, making it the fastest optical detection of a GRB from a GBM error-box. Spectroscopy obtained with the 10.4-m Gran Telescopio Canarias and the 6-m BTA of SAO RAS reveals a redshift of . We performed optical and near-infrared photometry of GRB 140801A using different telescopes with apertures ranging from 0.4-m to 10.4-m. GRB 140801A is a typical burst in many ways. The rest-frame bolometric isotropic energy release and…
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