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  • Other Sources  (44)
  • 1995-1999  (44)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: The burst acrsecond imaging and spectroscopy (BASIS) mission concept is reviewed. The scientific objectives of the mission are to accurately locate bursts, determine their distance scale and measure the physical characteristics of the emission region. Arcsecond burst positions would be obtained for approximately 100 bursts/yr in the 10 to 200 keV emission region, allowing deep, unconfused counterpart surveys at other wavelengths. The key enabling technology development is the production of CdZnTe room temperature semiconductor detectors with a spatial resolution of the order of 100 microns. Fine spectroscopy would be obtained between 0.2 and 200 keV. The 0.2 keV threshold would allow measurements of the absorption in our Galaxy and possible host galaxies.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: ; 495-498
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  • 2
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: The source GRO J1744-28 was discovered on 2 December 1995 with the burst and transient source experiment (BATSE) onboard the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (CGRO) when a series of 80 untriggered, hard X-ray bursts were recorded. The direction of the observed bursts was consistant with the Galactic center. The source was observed to emit at a constant rate of between 20 and 30 bursts per day for a five month period finishing the 2 May 1996. In mid-December 1996, a persistent source appeared from the same general direction which was identified as a binary pulsar orbiting a low mass companion. Pulsations were discovered in the bursts, thus establishing a common identity for the source of the bursts and the pulsar. The BATSE observations in the temporal and spectral domains are reviewed. Results of the subsequent multiwavelength observations are described.
    Keywords: Space Radiation
    Type: ; 157-161
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2011-08-23
    Description: The positions of the two error boxes for the soft gamma repeater (SGR) 1900+14 were determined by the "network synthesis" method, which employs observations by the Ulysses gamma-ray burst and CGRO BATSE instruments. The location of the first error box has been observed at optical, infrared, and X-ray wavelengths, resulting in the discovery of a ROSAT X-ray point source and a curious double infrared source. We have recently used the ROSAT HRI to observe the second error box to complete the counterpart search. A total of six X-ray sources were identified within the field of view. None of them falls within the network synthesis error box, and a 3 sigma upper limit to any X-ray counterpart was estimated to be 6.35 x 10(exp -14) ergs/sq cm/s. The closest source is approximately 3 min. away, and has an estimated unabsorbed flux of 1.5 x 10(exp -12) ergs/sq cm/s. Unlike the first error box, there is no supernova remnant near the second error box. The closest one, G43.9+1.6, lies approximately 2.dg6 away. For these reasons, we believe that the first error box is more likely to be the correct one.
    Keywords: Space Radiation
    Type: Astrophysical Journal; Volume 490; 823
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2011-08-23
    Description: A recent study has presented marginal statistical evidence that gamma-ray burst (GRB) sources are correlated with Abell clusters, based on analyses of bursts in the BATSE 3B catalog. Using precise localization information from the Third Interplanetary Network, we have reanalyzed this possible correlation. We find that most of the Abell clusters that are in the relatively large 3B error circles are not in the much smaller IPN/BATSE error regions. We believe that this argues strongly against an Abell cluster-GRB correlation.
    Keywords: Space Radiation
    Type: Astrophysical Journal Letters; Volume 479; L113
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2011-08-23
    Description: Although more than 2,000 astronomical gamma-ray bursts (GRBS) have been detected, and numerous models proposed to explain their occurrence, they have remained enigmatic owing to the lack of an obvious counterpart at other wavelengths. The recent ground-based detection of a transient optical source in the vicinity of GRB970228 may therefore have provided a breakthrough. The optical counterpart appears to be embedded in an extended source which, if a galaxy, as has been suggested would lend weight to those models that place GRBs at cosmological distances. Here we report, observations using the Hubble Space Telescope of the transient counterpart and extended source 26 and 39 days after the initial gamma-ray outburst. We find that the counterpart has faded since the initial detection (and continues to fade), but the extended source exhibits no significant change in brightness between the two dates of the observations reported here. The size and apparent constancy of the extended source imply that it is extragalactic, but its faintness makes a definitive statement about its nature difficult. Nevertheless, the decay profile of the transient source is consistent with a popular impulsive-fireball model13, which assumes a merger between two neutron stars in a distant galaxy.
    Keywords: Space Radiation
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2011-08-23
    Description: The orbital parameters of the recently discovered transient burster/pulsar GRO J1744-28 indicate that this system is a low-mass X-ray binary in an advanced stage of its mass transfer, with several tenths of a solar mass already transferred from the donor to the compact star. All neutron stars known to have accreted such an amount have very weak magnetic fields, and this has led to the idea that the magnetic fields of neutron stars decay as a result of accretion. The observation of a strongly magnetized neutron star in GRO J1744-28 then suggests that this neutron star was formed recently as a result of the collapse of a white dwarf during an earlier stage of the current phase of mass transfer. It is shown that this model can consistently explain the observed characteristics of GRO J1744-28. Attractive progenitors for such an evolution are the luminous supersoft X-ray sources detected with ROSAT.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Astronomy and Astrophysics; Volume 317; L9-L12
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2011-08-23
    Description: Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are thought to arise when an extremely relativistic outflow of particles from a massive explosion (the nature at which is still unclear) interacts with material surrounding the site of the explosion. Observations of the evolving changes in emission at many wavelengths allow us to investigate the origin of the photons, and so potentially determine the nature of the explosion. Here we report the results of gamma-ray, optical, infrared, submillimeter, millimeter and radio observations of the burst ORB990123 and its afterglow. Our interpretation of the data indicates that the initial and afterglow emissions are associated with three distinct regions in the fireball. The peak flux of the afterglow, one day after the burst, has a lower frequency than observed for other bursts; this explains the short-lived radio emission. We suggest that the differences between bursts reflect variations in the magnetic-field strength in the afterglow-emitting regions.
    Keywords: Space Radiation
    Type: Nature; Volume 398; 394-399
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2011-08-23
    Description: It is shown in this study that two different types of spectral emission are generally produced in gamma-ray bursts. A subset of bursts is identified that exhibits a marked lack of fluence above 300 keV, and these bursts are shown to have luminosities about an order of magnitude lower than bursts with significant fluence above 300 keV. The bursts lacking emission above 300 keV exhibit an effectively homogeneous intensity distribution. In addition, it is shown that both types of emission are common in many bursts, demonstrating that a single source object is capable of generating both of them. These results strongly favor a gamma-ray burst source object that produces two different types of emission with varying degrees of superposition. The impact of this behavior is strong enough that it affects the properties of the burst intensity distribution, as well as the burst spectral characteristics.
    Keywords: Space Radiation
    Type: Astrophysical Journal; Volume 489; 175-198
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2011-08-23
    Description: The discovery of afterglows associated with gamma-ray bursts at X-ray, optical and radio wavelengths and the measurement of the redshifts of some of these events has established that gamma-ray bursts lie at extreme distances, making them the most powerful photon-emitters known in the Universe. Here we report the discovery of transient optical emission in the error box of the gamma-ray burst GRB980425, the light curve of which was very different from that of previous optical afterglows associated with gamma-ray bursts. The optical transient is located in a spiral arm of the galaxy ESO 184-GS2, which has a redshift velocity of only 2,550 km/ s. Its optical spectrum and location indicate that it is a very luminous supernova, which has been identified as SN1998bw. If this supernova and GRB980425 are indeed associated, the energy radiated in gamma-rays is at least four orders of magnitude less than in other gamma-ray bursts, although its appearance was otherwise unremarkable: this indicates that very different mechanisms can give rise to gamma-ray bursts. But independent of this association, the supernova is itself unusual, exhibiting an unusual light curve at radio wavelengths that requires that the gas emitting the radio photons be expanding relativistically.
    Keywords: Astronomy
    Type: Nature; Volume 395; 670-672
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Soft gamma ray repeaters appear to be a new class of neutron stars. While a counterpart to SGR 0525-66 was detected uniquely in the X-ray band, SGR 1806-20 and SGR 1900+14 have unusual stellar counterparts whose spectra peak in the infrared. The infrared spectra appear to contain several components: the photospheric emission from stars dominates at shorter wavelengths; a bright point source dominates at 25 micrometers, and an extended source dominates at 60 micrometers. The longer wavelength spectra are inconsistent with mono-energetic synchrotron and black body radiation models. Recent millimeter, submillimeter and infrared observations are reviewed. A preliminary analysis of the higher resolution infrared spectra of SGR 1806-20 and SGR 1900+14 is outlined. These confirm previous observations suggesting that SGR1806-20 has an outflow and that the stars comprising the counterpart to SGR 1900+14 have very similar spectra.
    Keywords: Astronomy
    Type: ; 191-194
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