Bacodine 3rd Interplanetary Network Burst Localization

K Hurley, S Barthelmy,P Butterworth, T Cline,M Sommer,M Boer, M Niel, C Kouveliotou,G Fishman,C Meegan

GAMMA-RAY BURSTS - 3RD HUNTSVILLE SYMPOSIUM, PTS 1 AND 2(1996)

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Abstract
Even with only two widely separated spacecraft (Ulysses and GRO), 3rd Interplanetary Network (IPN) localizations can reduce the areas of BATSE error circles by two orders of magnitude. Therefore it is useful to disseminate them as quickly as possible following BATSE bursts. We have implemented a system which transmits the light curves of BACODINE/BATSE bursts directly by e-mail to UC Berkeley immediately after detection. An automatic e-mail parser at Berkeley watches for these notices, determines the Ulysses crossing time window, and initiates a search for the burst data on the JPL computer as they are received. In ideal cases, it is possible to retrieve the Ulysses data within a few hours of a burst, generate an annulus of arrival directions, and e-mail it out to the astronomical community by local nightfall. Human operators remain in this loop, but we are developing a fully automated routine which should remove them, at least for intense events, and reduce turn-around times to an absolute minimum. We explain the current operations, the data types used, and the speed/accuracy tradeoffs.
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gamma ray,data type
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