riassunto2

MG11 
Talk detail
 

 Participant 

Krimm, Hans

Institution

USRA / NASA GSFC  - Code 661, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center - Greenbelt - MD - USA

Session

Talk

Abstract

GRB4

Recent results from the Swift Burst Alert Telescope

The Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) on the Swift Gamma-Ray Burst MIDEX mission has detected more than 125 gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), nearly all of which have been followed up by the narrow-field instruments on Swift through automatic repointing, and by ground and other satellite telescopes after rapid notification. Within seconds of a trigger the BAT produces and relays to the ground a position good to three arc minutes and a four channel light curve. An overview of the properties of BAT bursts and BAT's performance as a burst monitor will be presented in this talk. BAT is a coded aperature imaging system with a wide (~2 sr) field of view consisting of a large coded mask located 1 m above a 5200 cm2 array of 32.768 CdZnTe detectors. All electronics and other hardware systems on the BAT have been operating well since commissioning and there is no sign of any degradation on orbit. The flight and ground software have proven similarly robust and allow the real time localization of all bursts and the rapid derivation of burst light curves, spectra and spectral fits on the ground.

 

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