DocumentCode :
437750
Title :
The ECLAIRs micro-satellite for multi-wavelength studies of gamma-ray burst prompt emission
Author :
Schanne, S. ; Atteia, J.-L. ; Barret, D. ; Basa, S. ; Boer, M. ; Cordier, B. ; Daigne, F. ; Ealet, A. ; Goldoni, P. ; Klotz, A. ; Limousin, O. ; Mandrou, P. ; Mochkovitch, R. ; Paltani, S. ; Paul, J. ; Petitjean, P. ; Pons, R. ; Skinner, G.
Author_Institution :
DAPNIA, CEA Saclay, Gif-sur-Yvette, France
Volume :
1
fYear :
2004
fDate :
16-22 Oct. 2004
Firstpage :
301
Abstract :
The cosmological revolution of 1997 has established that (at least long duration) gamma-ray bursts (GRB) are among the most energetic events in the Universe and occur at cosmological distances. The ECLAIRs micro-satellite, to be launched in 2009, will provide multi-wavelength observations for astrophysical studies of GRB and for their possible use as cosmological probes. It is expected to be the only space borne GRB trigger available for ground based robotic telescopes operational at that time. This paper presents the ECLAIRs project and its status. An X/gamma-ray camera onboard ECLAIRs with a wide field of view of 2 sr, will detect ∼100 GRB/yr in the 4-50 keV energy range, localize the GRB with a precision of ∼10 arcmin on the sky, and transmit this information to the ground in near real-time, as a GRB trigger for ground based optical telescopes. Inspired by the INTEGRAL imager IBIS, it is based on a CdTe detection plane covering 1000 cm2, placed 35 cm below a coded mask. An optical camera, sensitive to magnitude-15 stars, covering up to 1/4 of the X/gamma-ray camera´s field of view, will observe the prompt emission and a possible precursor of ∼10 GRB/yr in the visible-band. Used in a continuous acquisition mode at a rate of ∼5 images/s dumped into an on-board memory, a GRB event sent by the X/gamma-ray camera triggers a seek-back in memory for the GRB optical precursor. The full X/gamma-ray and visible-band data of a GRB are sent to ground when a high data-rate telemetry ground receiver is reachable.
Keywords :
X-ray apparatus; X-ray detection; artificial satellites; astronomical telescopes; cosmology; gamma-ray apparatus; gamma-ray bursts; gamma-ray detection; semiconductor counters; 4 to 50 keV; CdTe detection plane; ECLAIR microsatellite; GRB event; GRB optical precursor; IBIS; INTEGRAL imager; Universe; X-ray camera; astrophysical studies; coded mask; continuous acquisition mode; cosmological distances; cosmological probes; gamma-ray burst prompt emission; gamma-ray camera; ground based optical telescopes; ground based robotic telescopes; high data-rate telemetry ground receiver; multiwavelength observations; on-board memory; optical camera; real-time information transmission; space borne gamma-ray burst trigger; visible-band data; Cameras; Gamma ray bursts; Gamma ray detection; Optical receivers; Optical sensors; Orbital robotics; Probes; Robot vision systems; Stimulated emission; Telescopes;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 2004 IEEE
ISSN :
1082-3654
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8700-7
Electronic_ISBN :
1082-3654
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.2004.1462202
Filename :
1462202
Link To Document :
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