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First Results from Fermi GBM Earth Occultation Monitoring: Observations of Soft Gamma-Ray Sources Above 100 keV

Authors :
Case, Gary L.
Cherry, Michael L.
Rodi, James C.
Jenke, Peter
Wilson-Hodge, Colleen A.
Finger, Mark H.
Meegan, Charles A.
Camero-Arranz, Ascencion
Beklen, Elif
Bhat, P. Narayan
Briggs, Michael S.
Chaplin, Vandiver
Connaughton, Valerie
Paciesas, William S.
Preece, Robert
Kippen, R. Marc
von Kienlin, Andreas
Griener, Jochen
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

The NaI and BGO detectors on the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) on Fermi are now being used for long-term monitoring of the hard X-ray/low energy gamma-ray sky. Using the Earth occultation technique as demonstrated previously by the BATSE instrument on the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory, GBM can be used to produce multiband light curves and spectra for known sources and transient outbursts in the 8 keV to 1 MeV energy range with its NaI detectors and up to 40 MeV with its BGO detectors. Over 85% of the sky is viewed every orbit, and the precession of the Fermi orbit allows the entire sky to be viewed every ~26 days with sensitivity exceeding that of BATSE at energies below ~25 keV and above ~1.5 MeV. We briefly describe the technique and present preliminary results using the NaI detectors after the first two years of observations at energies above 100 keV. Eight sources are detected with a significance greater than 7 sigma: the Crab, Cyg X-1, SWIFT J1753.5-0127, 1E 1740-29, Cen A, GRS 1915+105, and the transient sources XTE J1752-223 and GX 339-4. Two of the sources, the Crab and Cyg X-1, have also been detected above 300 keV.<br />13 pages, 9 figures, submitted to ApJ

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c6bbe02de8f87ee887f38d8b648d7a70