13,594 research outputs found
A search for millimetric emission from Gamma Ray Bursts
We have used the 2- year Differential Microwave Radiometer data from the
COsmic Background Explorer (COBE) satellite to systematically search for
millimetric (31 - 90 GHz) emission from the Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) in the
Burst And Transient Source Experiment (BATSE) GRB 3B catalog. The large
beamsize of the COBE instrument (7 degs FWHM) allows for an efficient search of
the large GRB positional error boxes, although it also means that fluxes from
(point source) GRB objects will be somewhat diluted. A likelihood analysis has
been used to look for a change in the level of millimetric emission from the
locations of 81 GRB events during the first two years (1990 & 1991) of the COBE
mission. The likelihood analysis determined that we did not find any
significant millimetric signal before or after the occurance of the GRB. We
find 95% confidence level upper limits of 175, 192 and 645 Jy or, in terms of
fluxes, of 9.6, 16.3 and 54.8 10^{-13} erg/cm^2/s, respectively at 31, 53 and
90 GHz. We also look separately at different classes of GRBs, including a study
of the top ten (in peak flux) GRBs, the "short burst" and "long burst" subsets,
finding similar upper limits. While these limits may be somewhat higher than
one would like, we estimate that using this technique with future planned
missions could push these limits down to \sim 1 mJy.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, to be published in The Astrophysical Journa
Determination of life for a polyimide-epoxy alternator insulation system
Tests were conducted to predict remaining electrical insulation life of a polyimide epoxy insulated 60 KW, 208 volt homopolar inductor alternator, following completion of 23,130 hours of turbo-alternator endurance tests. The sectioned armature winding of this alternator stator was used as means to evaluate and measure end-life at several aging temperatures for development of an Arrhenius plot. A one-half life rate of 11.3 C was established from these data with a predicted remaining life of 60,000 hours at an armature winding temperature of 248 C and a total life, including endurance test time, of 61,645 hours
Scheduling spacecraft operations
A prototype scheduling system named MAESTRO currently under development is being used to explore possible approaches to the spacecraft operations scheduling problem. Results indicate that the appropriate combination of heuristic and other techniques can provide an acceptable solution to the scheduling problem over a wide range of operational scenarios and management approaches. These can include centralized or distributed instrument or systems control, batch or incremental scheduling, scheduling loose resource envelopes or exact profiles, and scheduling with varying degrees of user intervention. Techniques used within MAESTRO to provide this flexibility and power include constraint propagation mechanisms, multiple asynchronous processes, prioritized transaction-based command management, resource opportunity calculation, user-alterable selection and placement mechanisms, and maintenance of multiple schedules and resource profiles. These techniques and scheduling complexities requiring them are discussed
Gamma-Ray Burster Counterparts: HST Blue and Ultraviolet Data
The surest solution of the Gamma Ray Burst (GRB) mystery is to find an
unambiguous low-energy quiescent counterpart. However, to date no reasonable
candidates have been identified in the x-ray, optical, infrared, or radio
ranges. The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) has now allowed for the first deep
ultraviolet searches for quiescent counterparts. This paper reports on
multiepoch ultraviolet searches of five GRB positions with HST. We found no
sources with significant ultraviolet excesses, variability, parallax, or proper
motion in any of the burst error regions. In particular, we see no sources
similar to that proposed as a counterpart to the GRB970228. While this negative
result is disappointing, it still has good utility for its strict limits on the
no-host-galaxy problem in cosmological models of GRBs. For most cosmological
models (with peak luminosity 6X10^50 erg/s), the absolute B magnitude of any
possible host galaxy must be fainter than -15.5 to -17.4. These smallest boxes
for some of the brightest bursts provide the most critical test, and our limits
are a severe problem for all published cosmological burst models.Comment: 15 pages, 2 ps figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Severe New Limits on the Host Galaxies of Gamma Ray Bursts
The nature of Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) remains a complete mystery, despite the
recent breakthrough discovery of low energy counterparts, although it is now
generally believed that at least most GRBs are at cosmological distances.
Virtually all proposed cosmological models require bursters to reside in
ordinary galaxies. This can be tested by looking inside the smallest GRB error
boxes to see if ordinary galaxies appear at the expected brightness levels.
This letter reports on an analysis of the contents of 26 of the smallest
regions, many from the brightest bursts. These events will have and
small uncertainties about luminosity functions, K corrections and galaxy
evolutions; whereas the recent events with optical transients are much fainter
and hence have high redshifts and grave difficulties in interpretation. This
analysis strongly rejects the many models with peak luminosities of as deduced from the curve with no evolution.
Indeed, the lower limit on acceptable luminosities is . The only possible solution is to either place GRBs at
unexpectedly large distances (with for the faint BATSE bursts) or to
require bursters to be far outside any normal host galaxy.Comment: 17 pages, to be published by ApJ
A Statistical Treatment of the Gamma-Ray Burst "No Host Galaxy" Problem: II. Energies of Standard Candle Bursts
With the discovery that the afterglows after some bursts are coincident with
faint galaxies, the search for host galaxies is no longer a test of whether
bursts are cosmological, but rather a test of particular cosmological models.
The methodology we developed to investigate the original "no host galaxy"
problem is equally valid for testing different cosmological models, and is
applicable to the galaxies coincident with optical transients. We apply this
methodology to a family of models where we vary the total energy of standard
candle bursts. We find that total isotropic energies of E<2e52~erg are ruled
out while log(E)~53 erg is favored.Comment: To appear in Ap.J., 514, 15 pages + 7 figures, AASTeX 4.0. Revisions
are: additional author, updated data, and minor textual change
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