TITLE: GCN GRB OBSERVATION REPORT NUMBER: 4790 SUBJECT: GRB 060218: optical/nIR observations at La Palma DATE: 06/02/20 01:59:46 GMT FROM: Alberto Castro-Tirado at Inst.de Astro. de Andalucia A. de Ugarte Postigo, A. J. Castro-Tirado, S. B. Pandey (IAA-CSIC, Granada), D. Barrado- Navascués, A. Bayo, B. Montesinos (LAEFF-INTA, Madrid), K. Mishra (ARIES, Nainital),and S. Dehaes (Inst. voor Sterrenkunde, K.U. Leuven), on behalf of a larger collaboration report: "Following the detection by SWIFT of "GRB" 060218 (Cusumano et al. GCN Circ. 4770, Gehrels et al. GCN Circ. 4787) we have obtained UBVRIJHK images with the 1.2m Mercator (+MEROPE) and 3.5m TNG (+NICS) telescopes at La Palma (Canary Islands), starting on Feb 19.85 UT (i.e. 40.8 hr after the event). We detect a near-IR counterpart to the hard energy source on a stacked 150s image in the K'-band with K about 17 (with respect to 2MASS catalogue). Astrometry against USNO-A2.0 yields RA(2000) = 03 21 39.71, Dec(2000) = +16 52 02.1 (+/-0.5"). This position is fully consistent with the optical counterpart proposed by Cusumano et al. (op. cit.) and Marshall et al. (GCN Circ. 4779) and with the faint object reported by Mirabal (GCN Circ. 4783) on the SDSS archival data (Cool et al. GCN Circ. 4777). However, we do not find evidence of underlying extended emission in our K'-band frame (0".7 seeing). Together with the fact that the colour index of the source is J-K = 0, unlike GRB afterglow colours (see fig. 2 of Gorosabel et al. 2002, A&A 384, 11), it clearly favours a high-energy transient in our Galaxy." This Circular might be cited. [GCN OPS NOTE(20feb06): Per author's request, A. Bayo was added to the author list.]