1. AGILE and the Gamma-Ray Bursts.
- Author
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Tavani, M., Argan, A., Barbiellini, G., Bulgarelli, A., Cattaneo, P., Caraveo, P., Chen, A., Costa, E., De Paris, G., Del Monte, E., Di Cocco, G., Donnarumma, I., Evangelista, Y., Feroci, M., Fuschino, F., Galli, M., Gianotti, F., Giuliani, A., Labanti, C., and Lapshov, I.
- Subjects
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GAMMA ray bursts , *ASTROPHYSICS , *X-ray bursts , *SPECTRUM analysis , *IMAGING systems - Abstract
AGILE is an ASI high-energy astrophysics mission dedicated to the observation of the Universe. The satellite was successfully launched on April 23, 2007 to a quasi equatorial low-background orbit. The AGILE instrument is very compact and light (∼100 kg): a gamma-ray imager (sensitive in the energy band 30 MeV–50 GeV) is the central part of the instrument that includes also a light hard X-ray imager (18–60 keV) positioned on top of the instrument, and an omnidirectional Calorimeter (350 keV–100 MeV). AGILE is aimed at the study of the most energetic phenomena of our Universe including AGNs, GRBs, Galactic sources and transients. For the first time in gamma-ray astrophysics, AGILE reaches a field of view of about 3 sr with excellent angular resolution and good sensitivity. The unique combination of a hard X-ray imager and a gamma-ray imager is ideal for GRB and transient studies that constitute a crucial part of the AGILE scientific program. We summarize here the main characteristics of the GRB broad-band detection system on board of the AGILE satellite and report on some early GRB detections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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