Circular No. 6743 Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams INTERNATIONAL ASTRONOMICAL UNION Mailstop 18, Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Cambridge, MA 02138, U.S.A. IAUSUBS@CFA.HARVARD.EDU or FAX 617-495-7231 (subscriptions) BMARSDEN@CFA.HARVARD.EDU or DGREEN@CFA.HARVARD.EDU (science) URL http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/cfa/ps/cbat.html Phone 617-495-7244/7440/7444 (for emergency use only) POSSIBLE NEW SOFT gamma-RAY REPEATER K. Hurley, Space Sciences Laboratory, Berkeley, on behalf of the Ulysses Gamma-Ray Burst Team; C. Kouveliotou, Universities Space Research Association (USRA), on behalf of the Gamma-Ray Observatory BATSE team; and T. Cline and E. Mazets, on behalf of the KONUS-WIND team, report: "Ulysses has observed three similar short intense bursts whose triangulated positions are consistent with a single location. The first two occurred on June 29 (and were also observed by KONUS-WIND), and the third on Sept. 12; the second and third are the BATSE triggers described below. For each burst, we can derive a single annulus of possible arrival directions. They intersect over a region defined by the following coordinates (equinox 2000.0): R.A. = 18h14m50s, Decl. = -13o36'.6; 18h14m25s, -14o01'.7; 18h15m26s, -13o15'.0; 18h15m02s, -13o39'.8." C. Kouveliotou, USRA and Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), NASA; G. J. Fishman and C. A. Meegan, MSFC; and P. Woods, University of Alabama in Huntsville, report on behalf of the BATSE Team: "BATSE triggered on two very intense, short, soft events on June 29.27189 and Sept. 12.25652 UT. Each lasted about 2 s, and their (preliminary) spectra can be fitted with a power-law with indices of about -3.8 and -4.2, respectively. Given the characteristics and common location noted above, we classify them as soft-gamma-ray-repeater events from a previously unknown source." D. A. Smith, A. M. Levine, E. H. Morgan, and R. A. Remillard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), on behalf of the RXTE/ASM team at MIT and Goddard Space Flight Center, NASA; and R. Rutledge, Max-Planck-Institut fur Extraterrestrische Physik, write: "The RXTE All Sky Monitor has detected the Sept. 12 event reported above; ASM camera 3 detected a bright x-ray flash that lasted about 2.8 s and yielded a peak countrate of about 270 counts/s. The inferred peak flux, including corrections for background and location in the field-of-view, is about 10 Crab (2-12 keV). We obtain a single long, narrow line of position. Our formal analysis gives an error box with corners at R.A. = 18h25m39s.0, Decl. = -14o51'48"; 18h25m42s.6, -14o48'50"; 18h34m24s.9, -15o28'10"; 18h34m04s.5, -15o23'31" (equinox 2000.0). However, the determination of the ends of the error box along the long direction is subject to systematic errors of about 2 deg. With this consideration, the extension of our error box by about 2.8 deg in the long direction is consistent with the intersection of the position annuli from the IPN reported above. The combined IPN/ASM error box is centered at R.A. = 18h14m.7, Decl. = -13o40' and has a radius (90-percent confidence) of 5'." (C) Copyright 1997 CBAT 1997 September 13 (6743) Daniel W. E. Green