Feasibility of a Small, Rapid Optical/IR Response, Next Generation Gamma-Ray Burst Mission

We present motivations for and study feasibility of a small, rapid-optical/IR response gamma-ray burst (GRB) space observatory. By analyzing existing GRB data, we give realistic detection rates for X-ray and optical/IR instruments of modest size under actual flight conditions. Given new capabilities...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:EAS Publications Series 2013, Vol.61, p.633-637
Hauptverfasser: Grossan, B., Smoot, G.F., Bogomolov, V.V., Svertilov, S.I., Vedenkin, N.N., Panasyuk, M., Goncharov, B., Rozhkov, G., Saleev, K., Grobovskoj, E., Krasnov, A.S., Morozenko, V.S., Osedlo, V.I., Rogkov, E., Vachenko, T.V., Linder, E.V.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:We present motivations for and study feasibility of a small, rapid-optical/IR response gamma-ray burst (GRB) space observatory. By analyzing existing GRB data, we give realistic detection rates for X-ray and optical/IR instruments of modest size under actual flight conditions. Given new capabilities of fast optical/IR response (~1 s to target) and simultaneous multi-band imaging, such an observatory can have a reasonable event rate, likely leading to new science. Requiring a Swift-like orbit, duty cycle, and observing constraints, a Swift-BAT scaled down to 190 cm2 of detector area would still detect and locate about 25 GRB yr-1 for a trigger threshold of 6.5σ. About 23% of X–ray located GRB would be detected optically for a 10 cm diameter instrument (~6 yr-1 for the 6.5σ X-ray trigger).
ISSN:1633-4760
1638-1963
DOI:10.1051/eas/1361100