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Early Danish GRB Experiments – and some for theFuture?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 July 2013
Abstract
By 1975 the hunt for GRB counterparts had been on for almost ten years without success.Gamma burst instruments of that day provided little or no directional data in themselves.Positions could be extracted only using the time delay technique – potentially accuratebut very slow. Triggered by a japanese report of a balloon instrument for GRB studiesbased on a Rotation Modulation Collimator we at the Danish Space Research Institutestarted the development of an RMC detector for GRBs, the WATCH wide field monitor.
Four WATCH units were flown on the Soviet Granat satellites, and one on ESA’s EURECAsatellite. The design and results will be summarized. Now, 35 years later, recent detectordevelopments may allow the construction of WATCH-type instruments able to fit weight,power and data-wise into 1 kg cubesats. This could provide the basis for a true all-skymonitor with 100 percent duty cycle for rare, bright events.
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- © EAS, EDP Sciences 2013