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Swift's Scientific Objectives

What are the progenitors of GRBs?

  • identify host galaxies uniquely by obtaining arcsecond positions
  • measure redshift distribution to determine energetics, cosmological evolution, and the GRB luminosity function
  • locate GRBs relative to their host galaxies
  • constrain the burst environment using X-ray absorption and optical reddening
  • study type Ibc supernova, which are related to some gamma-ray bursts
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Are there different classes of bursts with different physical processes at work?

  • observe hundreds of GRBs and their afterglows
  • detect bursts with durations from milliseconds to thousands of seconds
  • detect bright and faint bursts
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How does the blast wave evolve and interact with its surroundings?

  • perform detailed multiwavelength observations starting immediately after a burst
  • frequently monitor multiwavelength afterglow for days after the event with high time resolution to detect fluctuations
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What can gamma ray bursts tell us about the early Universe?
  • use the optical/X-ray afterglow as high redshift beacons
  • measure the Ly-alpha forest
  • use X-ray absorption to probe the intergalactic/cluster medium
  • extend star-formation rate observations to high redshift
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Swift's Secondary Science

  • survey the hard X-ray sky to a sensitivity of 0.6 mCrab at high Galactic latitude and 2 mCrab along the Galactic plane
  • search for obscured Seyfert-2 type AGN, a category of active galaxies that is largely unstudied but may account for half of all AGN
  • scan half of the sky every day to search for new transient sources
  • obtain ultraviolet lightcurves of supernovae
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This page was last modified on Friday, 02-Apr-2010 13:42:35 EDT.

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