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The Gamma Ray Burst section of the White Paper on the Status and Future of Very High Energy Gamma Ray Astronomy: A Brief Preliminary Report

  • A. D. Falcone
  • , D. A. Williams
  • , M. G. Baring
  • , R. Blandford
  • , V. Connaughton
  • , P. Coppi
  • , C. Dermer
  • , B. Dingus
  • , C. Fryer
  • , N. Gehrels
  • , J. Granot
  • , D. Horan
  • , J. I. Katz
  • , K. Kuehn
  • , P. Mészáros
  • , J. Norris
  • , P. Saz Parkinson
  • , A. Pe'Er
  • , E. Ramirez-Ruiz
  • , S. Razzaque
  • X. Wang, B. Zhang
  • Pennsylvania State University
  • University of California at Santa Cruz
  • Rice University
  • Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
  • University of Maryland Baltimore County
  • Yale University
  • Naval Research Laboratory
  • MST-8, Los Alamos National Laboratory
  • NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
  • Argonne National Laboratory
  • Washington University in St. Louis
  • The Ohio State University
  • NASA Ames Research Center
  • Space Science Telescope Institute
  • University of California, Santa Cruz
  • University of Nevada Las Vegas

Résultats de recherche: Le chapitre dans un livre, un rapport, une anthologie ou une collectionContribution à une conférenceRevue par des pairs

Résumé

This is a short report on the preliminary findings of the gamma ray burst (GRB) working group for the white paper on the status and future of very high energy (VHE;>50GeV) gamma-ray astronomy. The white paper discusses the status of past and current attempts to observe GRBs at GeV-TeV energies, including a handful of low-significance, possible detections. The white paper concentrates on the potential of future ground-based gamma-ray experiments to observe the highest energy emission ever recorded for GRBs, particularly for those that are nearby and have high Lorentz factors in the GRB jet. It is clear that the detection of VHE emission would have strong implications for GRB models, as well as cosmic ray origin. In particular, the extended emission phase (including both afterglow emission and possible flaring) of nearby long GRBs could provide the best possibility for detection. The difficult-to-obtain observations during the prompt phase of nearby long GRBs and short GRBs could also provide particularly strong constraints on the opacity and bulk Lorentz factors surrounding the acceleration site. The synergy with upcoming and existing observatories will, of course, be critical for both identification of GRBs and for multiwavelength/multimessenger studies.

langue originaleAnglais
titreGamma-Ray Bursts 2007 - Proceedings of the Santa Fe Conference
Pages611-615
Nombre de pages5
Les DOIs
étatPublié - 1 déc. 2008
Modification externeOui
EvénementSanta Fe Conference on Gamma-Ray Bursts 2007, GRB 2007 - Santa Fe, NM, États-Unis
Durée: 5 nov. 20079 nov. 2007

Série de publications

NomAIP Conference Proceedings
Volume1000
ISSN (imprimé)0094-243X
ISSN (Electronique)1551-7616

Une conférence

Une conférenceSanta Fe Conference on Gamma-Ray Bursts 2007, GRB 2007
Pays/TerritoireÉtats-Unis
La villeSanta Fe, NM
période5/11/079/11/07

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