Cosmic gamma-ray bursts detected in the RELEC experiment onboard the Vernov satellite


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The RELEC scientific instrumentation onboard the Vernov spacecraft launched on July 8, 2014, included the DRGE gamma-ray and electron spectrometer. This instrument incorporates a set of scintillation phoswich detectors, including four identical X-ray and gamma-ray detectors in the energy range from 10 keV to 3 MeV with a total area of ~500 cm2 directed toward the nadir, and an electron spectrometer containing three mutually orthogonal detector units with a geometry factor of ~2 cm2 sr, which is also sensitive to X-rays and gamma-rays. The goal of the space experiment with the DRGE instrument was to investigate phenomena with fast temporal variability, in particular, terrestrial gammaray flashes (TGFs) and magnetospheric electron precipitations. However, the detectors of the DRGE instrument could record cosmic gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) and allowed one not only to perform a detailed analysis of the gamma-ray variability but also to compare the time profiles with the measurements made by other instruments of the RELEC scientific instrumentation (the detectors of optical and ultraviolet flashes, the radio-frequency and low-frequency analyzers of electromagnetic field parameters). We present the results of our observations of cosmicGRB 141011A and GRB 141104A, compare the parameters obtained in the GBM/Fermi and KONUS–Wind experiments, and estimate the redshifts and Eiso for the sources of these GRBs. The detectability of GRBs and good agreement between the independent estimates of their parameters obtained in various experiments are important factors of the successful operation of similar detectors onboard the Lomonosov spacecraft.

Sobre autores

A. Bogomolov

Skobeltsyn Institute of Nuclear Physics

Email: sis@coronas.ru
Rússia, Moscow, 119991

V. Bogomolov

Skobeltsyn Institute of Nuclear Physics; Faculty of Physics

Email: sis@coronas.ru
Rússia, Moscow, 119991; Moscow, 119991

A. Iyudin

Skobeltsyn Institute of Nuclear Physics

Email: sis@coronas.ru
Rússia, Moscow, 119991

E. Kuznetsova

Skobeltsyn Institute of Nuclear Physics; Faculty of Physics

Email: sis@coronas.ru
Rússia, Moscow, 119991; Moscow, 119991

P. Minaev

Space Research Institute

Email: sis@coronas.ru
Rússia, Profsoyuznaya ul. 84/32, Moscow, 117997

M. Panasyuk

Skobeltsyn Institute of Nuclear Physics; Faculty of Physics

Email: sis@coronas.ru
Rússia, Moscow, 119991; Moscow, 119991

A. Pozanenko

Space Research Institute; MEPhI National Research Nuclear University

Email: sis@coronas.ru
Rússia, Profsoyuznaya ul. 84/32, Moscow, 117997; Kashirskoe sh. 31, Moscow, 115409

A. Prokhorov

Skobeltsyn Institute of Nuclear Physics; Faculty of Physics

Email: sis@coronas.ru
Rússia, Moscow, 119991; Moscow, 119991

S. Svertilov

Skobeltsyn Institute of Nuclear Physics; Faculty of Physics

Autor responsável pela correspondência
Email: sis@coronas.ru
Rússia, Moscow, 119991; Moscow, 119991

A. Chernenko

Space Research Institute

Email: sis@coronas.ru
Rússia, Profsoyuznaya ul. 84/32, Moscow, 117997

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