Observing GRBs with the LOFT Wide Field Monitor

Open Access
Authors
  • S. Brandt
  • M. Hernanz
  • M. Feroci
  • L. Amati
  • A.P. Azzarello
  • D. Barret
  • E. Bozzo
  • C. Budtz-Jørgensen
  • R. Campana
  • A. Castro-Tirado
  • A. Cros
  • E. Del Monte
  • I. Donnarumma
  • Y. Evangelista
  • J.L. Galvez Sanchez
  • D. Götz
  • F. Hansen
  • J.W. den Herder
  • A. Hornstrup
  • R. Hudec
  • D. Karelin
  • M. van der Klis
  • S. Korpela
  • I. Kuvvetli
  • N. Lund
  • P. Orleanski
  • M. Pohl
  • A. Rachevski
  • A. Santangelo
  • S. Schanne
  • C. Schmid
  • L. Stella
  • S. Suchy
  • C. Tenzer
  • A. Vacchi
  • J. Wilms
  • N. Zampa
  • J.J.M. in 't Zand
  • A. Zdziarski
Publication date 2013
Host editors
  • A.J. Castro-Tirado
  • J. Gorosabel
  • I.H. Park
Book title Gamma-ray Bursts: 15 Years of GRB Afterglows – Progenitors, Environments and Host Galaxies from the Nearby to the Early Universe
Book subtitle Málaga, Spain, October 8-12, 2012
ISBN
  • 9782759810024
Series EAS Publications Series
Pages (from-to) 617-623
Publisher EDP Sciences
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
LOFT (Large Observatory For X-ray Timing) is one of the four candidate missions currently under assessment study for the M3 mission in ESAs Cosmic Vision program to be launched in 2024. LOFT will carry two instruments with prime sensitivity in the 2-30 keV range: a 10 m2 class large area detector (LAD) with a <1° collimated field of view and a wide field monitor (WFM) instrument. The WFM is based on the coded mask principle, and 5 camera units will provide coverage of more than 1/3 of the sky. The prime goal of the WFM is to detect transient sources to be observed by the LAD. With its wide field of view and good energy resolution of <500 eV, the WFM will be an excellent instrument for detecting and studying GRBs and X-ray flashes. The WFM will be able to detect ~150 gamma ray bursts per year, and a burst alert system will enable the distribution of ~100 GRB positions per year with a ~1 arcmin location accuracy within 30 s of the burst.
Document type Conference contribution
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1051/eas/1361098
Downloads
Observing_GRBs.pdf (Final published version)
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