An Untriggered Search for Optical Bursts

We present an untriggered search for optical bursts with the Robotic Optical Transient Search Experiment (ROTSE-I) telephoto array. Observations were taken that monitor an effective 256 deg2 field continuously over 125 hr to mROTSE = 15.7. The uniquely large field, moderate limiting magnitude, and fast cadence of ~10 minutes permit transient searches in a new region of sensitivity. Our search reveals no candidate events. To quantify this result, we simulate potential optical bursts with peak magnitude mp at t = 10 s, which fade as f = , where αt < 0. Simple estimates based on observational evidence indicate that a search of this sensitivity begins to probe the possible region occupied by gamma-ray burst (GRB) orphan afterglows. Our observing protocol and image sensitivity result in a broad region of high detection efficiency for light curves to the bright and slowly varying side of a boundary running from [αt,mp] = [-2.0, 6.0] to [-0.3, 13.2]. Within this region, the integrated rate of brief optical bursts is less than 1.1 × 10-8 s-1 deg-2. At ~22 times the observed GRB rate from BATSE, this suggests a limit on θopt/θγ 5, where θopt and θγ are the optical and gamma-ray collimation angles, respectively. Several effects might explain the absence of optical bursts, and a search of the kind described here but more sensitive by about 4 mag should offer a more definitive probe.

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