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Advances in Astronomy | 2010

MASTER ROBOTIC NET

V. Lipunov; Victor G. Kornilov; E. Gorbovskoy; Nikolaj Shatskij; D. Kuvshinov; Nataly V. Tyurina; A. Belinski; A. Krylov; P. Balanutsa; V. Chazov; A. Kuznetsov; Petr Kortunov; A. Sankovich; A. Tlatov; A. Parkhomenko; V. Krushinsky; Ivan Zalozhnyh; A. Popov; T. Kopytova; K. Ivanov; S. Yazev; V. Yurkov

The main goal of the MASTER-Net project is to produce a unique fast sky survey with all sky observed over a single night down to a limiting magnitude of 19-20. Such a survey will make it possible to address a number of fundamental problems: search for dark energy via the discovery and photometry of supernovae (including SNIa), search for exoplanets, microlensing effects, discovery of minor bodies in the Solar System, and space-junk monitoring. All MASTER telescopes can be guided by alerts, and we plan to observe prompt optical emission from gamma-ray bursts synchronously in several filters and in several polarization planes.


Astronomy Reports | 2013

The MASTER-II network of robotic optical telescopes. First results

E. Gorbovskoy; V. Lipunov; Victor G. Kornilov; A.A. Belinski; D. Kuvshinov; N. V. Tyurina; A.V. Sankovich; A. V. Krylov; N. Shatskiy; P. Balanutsa; V. Chazov; A. Kuznetsov; A. S. Zimnukhov; V. Shumkov; S. Shurpakov; V. Senik; Dilia Gareeva; M. Pruzhinskaya; A. G. Tlatov; A. V. Parkhomenko; D. Dormidontov; V. Krushinsky; A. Punanova; I. S. Zalozhnyh; A. Popov; A. Yu. Burdanov; S. A. Yazev; Nikolay M. Budnev; K. Ivanov; E. Konstantinov

The main stages in the creation of the Russian segment of the MASTER network of robotic telescopes is described. This network is designed for studies of the prompt optical emission of gammaray bursts (GRBs; optical emission synchronous with the gamma-ray radiation) and surveys of the sky aimed at discovering uncataloged objects and photometric studies for various programs. The first results obtained by the network, during its construction and immediately after its completion in December 2010, are presented. Eighty-nine alert pointings at GRBs (in most cases, being the first ground telescopes to point at the GRBs) were made from September 2006 through July 2011. The MASTER network holds first place in the world in terms of the total number of first pointings, and currently more than half of first pointings at GRBs by ground telescopes are made by the MASTER network. Photometric light curves of GRB 091020, GRB 091127, GRB 100901A, GRB 100906A, GRB 10925A, GRB 110106A, GRB 110422A, and GRB 110530A are presented. It is especially important that prompt emission was observed for GRB 100901A and GRB 100906A, and thar GRB 091127, GRB 110422A, and GRB 110106A were observed from the first seconds in two polarizations. Very-wide-field cameras carried out synchronous observations of the prompt emission of GRB 081102, GRB 081130B, GRB 090305B, GRB 090320B, GRB 090328, and GRB 090424. Discoveries of Type Ia supernovae are ongoing (among them the brightest supernova in 2009): 2008gy, 2009nr, 2010V, and others. In all, photometry of 387 supernovae has been carried out, 43 of which were either discovered or first observed with MASTER telescopes; more than half of these are Type Ia supernovae. Photometric studies of the open clusters NGC 7129 and NGC 7142 have been conducted, leading to the discovery of 38 variable stars. Sixty-nine optical transients have been discovered.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

Massive stars exploding in a He-rich circumstellar medium – IV. Transitional Type Ibn supernovae

Andrea Pastorello; Stefano Benetti; Peter J. Brown; D. Y. Tsvetkov; C. Inserra; S. Taubenberger; L. Tomasella; M. Fraser; D. J. Rich; M. T. Botticella; F. Bufano; E. Cappellaro; Mattias Ergon; E. Gorbovskoy; A. Harutyunyan; Fang Huang; R. Kotak; V. Lipunov; L. Magill; M. Miluzio; Nidia I. Morrell; P. Ochner; S. J. Smartt; Jesper Sollerman; S. Spiro; Maximilian D. Stritzinger; M. Turatto; S. Valenti; Xiaofeng Wang; D. Wright

We present ultraviolet, optical and near-infrared data of the Type Ibn supernovae (SNe) 2010al and 2011hw. SN 2010al reaches an absolute magnitude at peak of M-R = -18.86 +/- 0.21. Its early light curve shows similarities with normal SNe Ib, with a rise to maximum slower than most SNe Ibn. The spectra are dominated by a blue continuum at early stages, with narrow P-Cygni He I lines indicating the presence of a slow-moving, He-rich circumstellar medium. At later epochs, the spectra well match those of the prototypical SN Ibn 2006jc, although the broader lines suggest that a significant amount of He was still present in the stellar envelope at the time of the explosion. SN 2011hw is somewhat different. It was discovered after the first maximum, but the light curve shows a double peak. The absolute magnitude at discovery is similar to that of the second peak (M-R = -18.59 +/- 0.25), and slightly fainter than the average of SNe Ibn. Though the spectra of SN 2011hw are similar to those of SN 2006jc, coronal lines and narrow Balmer lines are clearly detected. This indicates substantial interaction of the SN ejecta with He-rich, but not H-free, circumstellar material. The spectra of SN 2011hw suggest that it is a transitional SN Ibn/IIn event similar to SN 2005la. While for SN 2010al the spectrophotometric evolution favours a H-deprived Wolf-Rayet progenitor (of WN-type), we agree with the conclusion of Smith et al. that the precursor of SN 2011hw was likely in transition from a luminous blue variable to an early Wolf-Rayet (Ofpe/WN9) stage.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

Prompt, early, and afterglow optical observations of five gamma-ray bursts (GRBs 100901A, 100902A, 100905A, 100906A, and 101020A)

E. Gorbovskoy; V. Kornilov; A.V. Sankovich; K. Ivanov; V. Krushinski; D.S. Zimnukhov; Nikolay M. Budnev; D.V. Dormidontov; J. Gorosabel; A.A. Popov; D. Kuvshinov; S. Yazev; R. Sánchez-Ramírez; E. Konstantinov; V. Sennik; N. Tyurina; D. Varda; I. Kudelina; V. Lipunov; V. Poleschuk; N. Shatskiy; A.A. Belinski; O. Chvalaev; A. Kuznetsov; Y. Sergienko; A. J. Castro-Tirado; P. Balanutsa; V. Yurkov; Martin Jelinek; V. Chazov

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 radiation in the two bursts. The light curves patterns and spectral distributions suggest a common production site of the prompt optical and high-energy emission in GRB 100901A. Results of spectral fits for GRB 100901A in the range from the optical to X-rays favor power-law energy distributions with similar values of the optical extinction in the host galaxy. GRB 100906A produced a smoothly peaking optical light curve suggesting that the prompt optical radiation in this GRB originated in a front shock. This is supported by a spectral analysis. We have found that the Amati and Ghirlanda relations are satisfied for GRB 100906A. An upper limit on the value of the optical extinction on the host of GRB 100906A is obtained.


Nature | 2017

Significant and variable linear polarization during the prompt optical flash of GRB 160625B

Eleonora Troja; V. Lipunov; Carole G. Mundell; N. Butler; Alan M. Watson; Shiho Kobayashi; S. B. Cenko; F. E. Marshall; R. Ricci; Andrew S. Fruchter; M. H. Wieringa; E. Gorbovskoy; V. Kornilov; A. Kutyrev; W. H. Lee; V. Toy; N. Tyurina; Nikolay M. Budnev; D. Buckley; J. Gonzalez; O. Gress; Assaf Horesh; M. I. Panasyuk; Jason X. Prochaska; Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz; R.R. Lopez; Michael G. Richer; Carlos G. Román-Zúñiga; M. Serra-Ricart; V. Yurkov

Newly formed black holes of stellar mass launch collimated outflows (jets) of ionized matter that approach the speed of light. These outflows power prompt, brief and intense flashes of γ-rays known as γ-ray bursts (GRBs), followed by longer-lived afterglow radiation that is detected across the electromagnetic spectrum. Measuring the polarization of the observed GRB radiation provides a direct probe of the magnetic fields in the collimated jets. Rapid-response polarimetric observations of newly discovered bursts have probed the initial afterglow phase, and show that, minutes after the prompt emission has ended, the degree of linear polarization can be as high as 30 per cent—consistent with the idea that a stable, globally ordered magnetic field permeates the jet at large distances from the central source. By contrast, optical and γ-ray observations during the prompt phase have led to discordant and often controversial results, and no definitive conclusions have been reached regarding the origin of the prompt radiation or the configuration of the magnetic field. Here we report the detection of substantial (8.3 ± 0.8 per cent from our most conservative simulation), variable linear polarization of a prompt optical flash that accompanied the extremely energetic and long-lived prompt γ-ray emission from GRB 160625B. Our measurements probe the structure of the magnetic field at an early stage of the jet, closer to its central black hole, and show that the prompt phase is produced via fast-cooling synchrotron radiation in a large-scale magnetic field that is advected from the black hole and distorted by dissipation processes within the jet.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

The optical identification of events with poorly defined locations: the case of the Fermi GBM GRB 140801A

V. Lipunov; Javier Gorosabel; M. Pruzhinskaya; A. de Ugarte Postigo; V. Pelassa; A. E. Tsvetkova; I. V. Sokolov; D. A. Kann; Dong Xu; E. Gorbovskoy; V. V. Krushinski; Victor G. Kornilov; P. V. Balanutsa; S. V. Boronina; Nikolay M. Budnev; Z. Cano; A. J. Castro-Tirado; V. V. Chazov; V. Connaughton; C. Delvaux; D. D. Frederiks; J. F. U. Fynbo; A. V. Gabovich; A. Goldstein; J. Greiner; O. Gress; K. Ivanov; P. Jakobsson; Sylvio Klose; F. Knust

We report the early discovery of the optical afterglow of gamma-ray burst (GRB) 140801A in the 137 deg


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

Early polarization observations of the optical emission of gamma-ray bursts: GRB 150301B and GRB 150413A

E. Gorbovskoy; V. Lipunov; D. A. H. Buckley; Victor G. Kornilov; P. Balanutsa; N. Tyurina; A. Kuznetsov; D. Kuvshinov; I. Gorbunov; D. Vlasenko; E. Popova; V. Chazov; S. Potter; M. Kotze; A. Y. Kniazev; O. Gress; Nikolay M. Budnev; K. Ivanov; S. Yazev; A. Tlatov; V. Senik; D. V. Dormidontov; A. V. Parhomenko; V. V. Krushinski; I. S. Zalozhnich; R. Alberto Castro-Tirado; R. Sánchez-Ramírez; Y. Sergienko; A. Gabovich; V. Yurkov

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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2009

Population synthesis of gamma‐ray bursts with precursor activity and the spinar paradigm

Galina V. Lipunova; E. Gorbovskoy; A. I. Bogomazov; V. Lipunov

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The Astrophysical Journal | 2007

An Extra Long X-Ray Plateau in a Gamma-Ray Burst and the Spinar Paradigm

V. Lipunov; E. Gorbovskoy

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The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

MASTER Optical Detection of the First LIGO/Virgo Neutron Star Binary Merger GW170817

V. Lipunov; E. Gorbovskoy; V. Kornilov; N. Tyurina; P. Balanutsa; A. Kuznetsov; D. Vlasenko; D. Kuvshinov; I. Gorbunov; D. Buckley; A. V. Krylov; R. Podesta; C. Lopez; F. Podesta; H. Levato; C. Saffe; C. Mallamachi; S. Potter; Nikolay M. Budnev; O. Gress; Yu. Ishmuhametova; V. Vladimirov; D.S. Zimnukhov; V. Yurkov; Y. Sergienko; A. Gabovich; R. Rebolo; M. Serra-Ricart; G. Israelyan; V. Chazov

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

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V. Lipunov

Moscow State University

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P. Balanutsa

Sternberg Astronomical Institute

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K. Ivanov

Irkutsk State University

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D. Kuvshinov

Moscow State University

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D. Dormidontov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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V. Chazov

Sternberg Astronomical Institute

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S. Yazev

Irkutsk State University

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V. Yurkov

Pedagogical University

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V. Kornilov

Moscow State University

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