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The UFFO (Ultra Fast Flash Observatory) Pathfinder: Science and Mission
Hundreds of gamma-ray burst (GRB) optical light curves have been measured
since the discovery of optical afterglows. However, even after nearly 7 years
of operation of the Swift Observatory, only a handful of measurements have been
made soon (within a minute) after the gamma ray signal. This lack of early
observations fails to address burst physics at short time scales associated
with prompt emissions and progenitors. Because of this lack of sub-minute data,
the characteristics of the rise phase of optical light curve of short-hard type
GRB and rapid-rising GRB, which may account for ~30% of all GRB, remain
practically unknown. We have developed methods for reaching sub-minute and
sub-second timescales in a small spacecraft observatory. Rather than slewing
the entire spacecraft to aim the optical instrument at the GRB position, we use
rapidly moving mirror to redirect our optical beam. As a first step, we employ
motorized slewing mirror telescope (SMT), which can point to the event within
1s, in the UFFO Pathfinder GRB Telescope onboard the Lomonosov satellite to be
launched in Nov. 2011. UFFO's sub-minute measurements of the optical emission
of dozens of GRB each year will result in a more rigorous test of current
internal shock models, probe the extremes of bulk Lorentz factors, provide the
first early and detailed measurements of fast-rise GRB optical light curves,
and help verify the prospect of GRB as a new standard candle. We will describe
the science and the mission of the current UFFO Pathfinder project, and our
plan of a full-scale UFFO-100 as the next step.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, to appear in the 32nd International Conference on
Cosmic Rays (ICRC), Beijing, August 11-18, 201