Rapid Centroids and the Refined Position Accuracy of the Swift Gamma-ray Burst Catalogue
Author(s) -
J. E. Hill,
Leonardo Angelini,
A. Moretti,
D. Morris,
J. L. Racusin,
D. N. Burrows,
A. P. Beardmore,
S. Campana,
M. Capalbi,
J. A. Kennea,
J. P. Osborne,
C. Pagani,
G. Tagliaferri,
G. Chincarini,
N. Gehrels,
Alan Wells,
J. A. Nousek
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
aip conference proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.177
H-Index - 75
eISSN - 1551-7616
pISSN - 0094-243X
DOI - 10.1063/1.2207906
Subject(s) - telescope , physics , observatory , gamma ray burst , centroid , brightness , position (finance) , calibration , spacecraft , detector , software , remote sensing , satellite , swift , optics , computer science , astronomy , astrophysics , artificial intelligence , finance , quantum mechanics , economics , programming language , geology
The Swift X‐ray Telescope autonomously refines the Burst Alert Telescope positions (∼1–4′ uncertainty) to better than 5 arcsec, within 5 seconds of target acquisition by the observatory for typical bursts. The results of the rapid positioning capability of the XRT are presented here for both known sources and newly discovered GRBs, demonstrating the ability to automatically utilise one of two integration times according to the burst brightness, and to correct the position for alignment offsets caused by the fast pointing performance and variable thermal environment of the satellite as measured by the Telescope Alignment Monitor. We present an evaluation of the position accuracy for both the onboard centroiding software and the ground software for the calibration targets and show that a significant improvement in position accuracy is obtained if the boresight detector position is optimised relative to the spacecraft pointing. Finally, we present an updated catalogue of Swift GRB X‐ray positions obtained in...
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