Localisation of gamma-ray bursts from the combined SpIRIT+HERMES-TP/SP nano-satellite constellation

Multi-messenger observations of the transient sky to detect cosmic explosions and counterparts of gravitational wave mergers critically rely on orbiting wide-FoV telescopes to cover the wide range of wavelengths where atmospheric absorption and emission limit the use of ground facilities. Thanks to...

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Hauptverfasser: Thomas, Matt, Trenti, Michele, Campana, Riccardo, Ghirlanda, Giancarlo, Ripa, Jakub, Burderi, Luciano, Fiore, Fabrizio, Evangelista, Yuri, Amati, Lorenzo, Barraclough, Simon, Auchettl, Katie, Ortiz del Castillo, Miguel, Chapman, Airlie, Citossi, Marco, Colagrossi, Andrea, Dilillo, Giuseppe, Deiosso, Nicola, Demenev, Evgeny, Longo, Francesco, Marino, Alessio, McRobbie, Jack, Mearns, Robert, Melandri, Andrea, Riggio, Alessandro, Tiziana Di Salvo, Puccetti Simonetta, Topinka, Martin
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container_title arXiv.org
container_volume
creator Thomas, Matt
Trenti, Michele
Campana, Riccardo
Ghirlanda, Giancarlo
Ripa, Jakub
Burderi, Luciano
Fiore, Fabrizio
Evangelista, Yuri
Amati, Lorenzo
Barraclough, Simon
Auchettl, Katie
Ortiz del Castillo, Miguel
Chapman, Airlie
Citossi, Marco
Colagrossi, Andrea
Dilillo, Giuseppe
Deiosso, Nicola
Demenev, Evgeny
Longo, Francesco
Marino, Alessio
McRobbie, Jack
Mearns, Robert
Melandri, Andrea
Riggio, Alessandro
Tiziana Di Salvo
Puccetti Simonetta
Topinka, Martin
description Multi-messenger observations of the transient sky to detect cosmic explosions and counterparts of gravitational wave mergers critically rely on orbiting wide-FoV telescopes to cover the wide range of wavelengths where atmospheric absorption and emission limit the use of ground facilities. Thanks to continuing technological improvements, miniaturised space instruments operating as distributed-aperture constellations are offering new capabilities for the study of high energy transients to complement ageing existing satellites. In this paper we characterise the performance of the upcoming joint SpIRIT + HERMES-TP/SP nano-satellite constellation for the localisation of high-energy transients through triangulation of signal arrival times. SpIRIT is an Australian technology and science demonstrator satellite designed to operate in a low-Earth Sun-synchronous Polar orbit that will augment the science operations for the equatorial HERMES-TP/SP. In this work we simulate the improvement to the localisation capabilities of the HERMES-TP/SP when SpIRIT is included in an orbital plane nearly perpendicular (inclination = 97.6\(^\circ\)) to the HERMES orbits. For the fraction of GRBs detected by three of the HERMES satellites plus SpIRIT, the combined constellation is capable of localising 60% of long GRBs to within ~ 30 deg\(^2\) on the sky, and 60% of short GRBs within ~ 1850 deg\(^2\). Based purely on statistical GRB localisation capabilities (i.e., excluding systematic uncertainties and sky coverage), these figures for long GRBs are comparable to those reported by the Fermi GBM. Further improvements by a factor of 2 (or 4) can be achieved by launching an additional 4 (or 6) SpIRIT-like satellites into a Polar orbit, which would both increase the fraction of sky covered by multiple satellite elements, and enable \(\geq\) 60% of long GRBs to be localised within a radius of ~ 1.5\(^\circ\) on the sky.
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For the fraction of GRBs detected by three of the HERMES satellites plus SpIRIT, the combined constellation is capable of localising 60% of long GRBs to within ~ 30 deg\(^2\) on the sky, and 60% of short GRBs within ~ 1850 deg\(^2\). Based purely on statistical GRB localisation capabilities (i.e., excluding systematic uncertainties and sky coverage), these figures for long GRBs are comparable to those reported by the Fermi GBM. Further improvements by a factor of 2 (or 4) can be achieved by launching an additional 4 (or 6) SpIRIT-like satellites into a Polar orbit, which would both increase the fraction of sky covered by multiple satellite elements, and enable \(\geq\) 60% of long GRBs to be localised within a radius of ~ 1.5\(^\circ\) on the sky.</abstract><cop>Ithaca</cop><pub>Cornell University Library, arXiv.org</pub><doi>10.48550/arxiv.2301.09686</doi><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Emissions control
Explosions
Gamma ray bursts
Gravitational waves
High energy astronomy
Launching
Localization
Multinational space ventures
Nanosatellites
Physics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
Physics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
Polar orbits
Satellite constellations
Satellite observation
Satellites
Telescopes
Triangulation
title Localisation of gamma-ray bursts from the combined SpIRIT+HERMES-TP/SP nano-satellite constellation
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