Prospects for GRB Science with the Fermi Large Area Telescope Auteur(s): Band D. L., Axelsson M., Baldini L., Barbiellini G., Baring M. G., Bastieri D., Battelino M., Bellazzini R., Bissaldi E., Bogaert G., Chiang J., Cohen-Tanugi J., Connaughton V., Cutini S., de Palma F., Dingus B. L., Silva E. do Couto e, Fishman G., Galli A., Guiriec Sylvain, Hughes R. E., Komin Nukri, Norris J. P., Olivo M., Pelassa V., Piron F., Russell J. J., Sgrò C., Smith P. D., Bonnell J. (Article) Publié: The Astrophysical Journal / The Astrophysical Journal Letters, vol. 701 p.1673-1694 (2009) Texte intégral en Openaccess : Ref HAL: hal-00430393_v1 Ref Arxiv: 0906.0991 DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/701/2/1673 Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS Exporter : BibTex | endNote 48 citations Résumé: The LAT instrument on the Fermi mission will reveal the rich spectral and temporal gamma-ray burst phenomena in the > 100 MeV band. The synergy with Fermi's GBM detectors will link these observations to those in the well explored 10-1000 keV range; the addition of the > 100 MeV band observations will resolve theoretical uncertainties about burst emission in both the prompt and afterglow phases. Trigger algorithms will be applied to the LAT data both onboard the spacecraft and on the ground. The sensitivity of these triggers will differ because of the available computing resources onboard and on the ground. Here we present the LAT's burst detection methodologies and the instrument's GRB capabilities. |