15–20 Oct 2017
Congress Center Garmisch-Partenkirchen
Europe/Berlin timezone
The proceedings of the 7th Fermi Symposium are available at https://pos.sissa.it/312/

BurstCube: A CubeSat for Gravitational Wave Counterparts

Not scheduled
10m
Congress Center Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Congress Center Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Richard-Strauss-Platz 1A, 82467 Garmisch-Partenkirchen Germany
Poster Future gamma-ray satellite missions Future gamma-ray satellite missions

Speaker

Jeremy Perkins (NASA/GSFC)

Description

We present BurstCube, a novel CubeSat that will detect and localize Gamma-ray Bursts (GRBs).

BurstCube will detect long GRBs, attributed to the collapse of massive stars, short GRBs (sGRBs), resulting from binary neutron star mergers, as well as other gamma-ray transients in the energy range 10-1000 keV. sGRBs are of particular interest because they are predicted to be the counterparts of gravitational wave (GW) sources soon to be detectable by LIGO/Virgo. BurstCube contains 4 CsI scintillators coupled with arrays of compact low-power Silicon photomultipliers (SiPMs) on a 6U Dellingr bus, a flagship modular platform platform that is easily modifiable for a variety of 6U CubeSat architectures. BurstCube will complement existing facilities such as Swift and Fermi in the short term, and provide a means for GRB detection, localization, and characterization in the interim time before the next generation future gamma-ray mission flies, as well as space-qualify SiPMs and test technologies for future use on larger gamma-ray missions. The ultimate configuration of BurstCube is to have a set of ~10 BurstCubes to provide all-sky coverage to GRBs for substantially lower cost than a full-scale mission.

Primary authors

Jeremy Perkins (NASA/GSFC) Judith Racusin (NASA/GSFC)

Co-authors

Colleen Wilson-Hodge (NASA/MSFC) Daniel Kocevski (NASA/MSFC) Prof. David Morris (UVI) Julie McEnery (NASA/GSFC) Michelle Hui (NASA/MSFC) Regina Caputo (UMD/NASA/GSFC)

Presentation materials