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Featured researches published by Ann Marie Parsons.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2004

The Swift gamma-ray burst mission

Neil Gehrels; Guido Chincarini; P. Giommi; K. O. Mason; John A. Nousek; Alan A. Wells; N. E. White; S. D. Barthelmy; David N. Burrows; Lynn R. Cominsky; K. Hurley; F. E. Marshall; P. Meszaros; Pwa Roming; Lorella Angelini; Loius M. Barbier; T. Belloni; Sergio Campana; Patrizia A. Caraveo; Margaret Chester; Oberto Citterio; T. L. Cline; Mark Cropper; J. R. Cummings; A. J. Dean; E. D. Feigelson; E. E. Fenimore; Dale A. Frail; Andrew S. Fruchter; Gordon Garmire

The Swift mission, scheduled for launch in 2004, is a multiwavelength observatory for gamma-ray burst (GRB) astronomy. It is a first-of-its-kind autonomous rapid-slewing satellite for transient astronomy and pioneers the way for future rapid-reaction and multiwavelength missions. It will be far more powerful than any previous GRB mission, observing more than 100 bursts yr � 1 and performing detailed X-ray and UV/optical afterglow observations spanning timescales from 1 minute to several days after the burst. The objectives are to (1) determine the origin of GRBs, (2) classify GRBs and search for new types, (3) study the interaction of the ultrarelativistic outflows of GRBs with their surrounding medium, and (4) use GRBs to study the early universe out to z >10. The mission is being developed by a NASA-led international collaboration. It will carry three instruments: a newgeneration wide-field gamma-ray (15‐150 keV) detector that will detect bursts, calculate 1 0 ‐4 0 positions, and trigger autonomous spacecraft slews; a narrow-field X-ray telescope that will give 5 00 positions and perform spectroscopy in the 0.2‐10 keV band; and a narrow-field UV/optical telescope that will operate in the 170‐ 600 nm band and provide 0B3 positions and optical finding charts. Redshift determinations will be made for most bursts. In addition to the primary GRB science, the mission will perform a hard X-ray survey to a sensitivity of � 1m crab (� 2;10 � 11 ergs cm � 2 s � 1 in the 15‐150 keV band), more than an order of magnitude better than HEAO 1 A-4. A flexible data and operations system will allow rapid follow-up observations of all types of


Space Science Reviews | 2005

The Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) on the SWIFT Midex Mission

S. D. Barthelmy; Louis M. Barbier; J. R. Cummings; E. E. Fenimore; Neil Gehrels; Derek D. Hullinger; Hans A. Krimm; Craig B. Markwardt; David M. Palmer; Ann Marie Parsons; G. Sato; Masaya Suzuki; Tadayuki Takahashi; Makota Tashiro; J. Tueller

Abstracthe burst alert telescope (BAT) is one of three instruments on the Swift MIDEX spacecraft to study gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). The BAT first detects the GRB and localizes the burst direction to an accuracy of 1–4 arcmin within 20 s after the start of the event. The GRB trigger initiates an autonomous spacecraft slew to point the two narrow field-of-view (FOV) instruments at the burst location within 20–70 s so to make follow-up X-ray and optical observations. The BAT is a wide-FOV, coded-aperture instrument with a CdZnTe detector plane. The detector plane is composed of 32,768 pieces of CdZnTe (4×4×2 mm), and the coded-aperture mask is composed of ∼52,000 pieces of lead (5×5×1 mm) with a 1-m separation between mask and detector plane. The BAT operates over the 15–150 keV energy range with ∼7 keV resolution, a sensitivity of ∼10−8 erg s−1 cm−2, and a 1.4 sr (half-coded) FOV. We expect to detect > 100 GRBs/year for a 2-year mission. The BAT also performs an all-sky hard X-ray survey with a sensitivity of ∼2 m Crab (systematic limit) and it serves as a hard X-ray transient monitor.


Nature | 2005

A short γ-ray burst apparently associated with an elliptical galaxy at redshift z = 0.225

Neil Gehrels; Craig L. Sarazin; Paul T. O'Brien; Bing Zhang; Loius M. Barbier; S. D. Barthelmy; Alexander J. Blustin; David N. Burrows; J. Cannizzo; J. R. Cummings; Michael R. Goad; Stephen T. Holland; C. P. Hurkett; J. A. Kennea; Andrew J. Levan; Craig B. Markwardt; K. O. Mason; P. Meszaros; M. J. Page; David M. Palmer; E. Rol; Takanori Sakamoto; R. Willingale; Lorella Angelini; Andrew P. Beardmore; Patricia T. Boyd; Alice A. Breeveld; Sergio Campana; Margaret Chester; Guido Chincarini

Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) come in two classes: long (> 2 s), soft-spectrum bursts and short, hard events. Most progress has been made on understanding the long GRBs, which are typically observed at high redshift (z ≈ 1) and found in subluminous star-forming host galaxies. They are likely to be produced in core-collapse explosions of massive stars. In contrast, no short GRB had been accurately (< 10″) and rapidly (minutes) located. Here we report the detection of the X-ray afterglow from—and the localization of—the short burst GRB 050509B. Its position on the sky is near a luminous, non-star-forming elliptical galaxy at a redshift of 0.225, which is the location one would expect if the origin of this GRB is through the merger of neutron-star or black-hole binaries. The X-ray afterglow was weak and faded below the detection limit within a few hours; no optical afterglow was detected to stringent limits, explaining the past difficulty in localizing short GRBs.


Nature | 2005

A giant γ-ray flare from the magnetar SGR 1806-20

David M. Palmer; S. D. Barthelmy; Neil Gehrels; R. M. Kippen; T. Cayton; C. Kouveliotou; David Eichler; R. A. M. J. Wijers; Peter M. Woods; Jonathan Granot; Yuri Lyubarsky; E. Ramirez-Ruiz; Louis M. Barbier; Margaret Chester; J. R. Cummings; E. E. Fenimore; Mark H. Finger; B. M. Gaensler; Derek D. Hullinger; Hans A. Krimm; Craig B. Markwardt; John A. Nousek; Ann Marie Parsons; S.K. Patel; T. Sakamoto; G. Sato; M. Suzuki; J. Tueller

Two classes of rotating neutron stars—soft γ-ray repeaters (SGRs) and anomalous X-ray pulsars—are magnetars, whose X-ray emission is powered by a very strong magnetic field (B ≈ 1015 G). SGRs occasionally become ‘active’, producing many short X-ray bursts. Extremely rarely, an SGR emits a giant flare with a total energy about a thousand times higher than in a typical burst. Here we report that SGR 1806–20 emitted a giant flare on 27 December 2004. The total (isotropic) flare energy is 2 × 1046 erg, which is about a hundred times higher than the other two previously observed giant flares. The energy release probably occurred during a catastrophic reconfiguration of the neutron stars magnetic field. If the event had occurred at a larger distance, but within 40 megaparsecs, it would have resembled a short, hard γ-ray burst, suggesting that flares from extragalactic SGRs may form a subclass of such bursts.1 Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, 87545, USA 2 NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, 20771, USA 3 NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center, NSSTC, XD-12, 320 Sparkman Dr., Huntsville, AL 35805, USA 4 Department of Physics, Ben Gurion University, POB 653, Beer Sheva 84105, Israel 5 Astronomical Institute “Anton Pannekoek”, University of Amsterdam, Kruislaan 403, 1098 SJ, Amster-


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2010

The 22-Month Swift-BAT All-Sky Hard X-ray Survey

J. Tueller; W. H. Baumgartner; Craig B. Markwardt; G. K. Skinner; R. F. Mushotzky; M. Ajello; S. D. Barthelmy; A. P. Beardmore; W. N. Brandt; D. N. Burrows; Guido Chincarini; Sergio Campana; J. R. Cummings; G. Cusumano; P. A. Evans; E. E. Fenimore; N. Gehrels; Olivier Godet; Dirk Grupe; S. T. Holland; J. A. Kennea; Hans A. Krimm; M. Koss; A. Moretti; Koji Mukai; J. P. Osborne; Takashi Okajima; Claudio Pagani; Kim L. Page; David M. Palmer

We present the catalog of sources detected in the first 22 months of data from the hard X-ray survey (14-195 keV) conducted with the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) coded mask imager on the Swift satellite. The catalog contains 461 sources detected above the 4.8σ level with BAT. High angular resolution X-ray data for every source from Swift-XRT or archival data have allowed associations to be made with known counterparts in other wavelength bands for over 97% of the detections, including the discovery of ~30 galaxies previously unknown as active galactic nuclei and several new Galactic sources. A total of 266 of the sources are associated with Seyfert galaxies (median redshift z ~ 0.03) or blazars, with the majority of the remaining sources associated with X-ray binaries in our Galaxy. This ongoing survey is the first uniform all-sky hard X-ray survey since HEAO-1 in 1977. Since the publication of the nine-month BAT survey we have increased the number of energy channels from four to eight and have substantially increased the number of sources with accurate average spectra. The BAT 22 month catalog is the product of the most sensitive all-sky survey in the hard X-ray band, with a detection sensitivity (4.8σ) of 2.2 × 10–11 erg cm–2 s–1 (1 mCrab) over most of the sky in the 14-195 keV band.


Nature | 2005

A link between prompt optical and prompt γ-ray emission in γ-ray bursts

W. T. Vestrand; Przemyslaw Remigiusz Wozniak; J. Wren; E. E. Fenimore; Takanori Sakamoto; R. R. White; D. Casperson; H. Davis; S. M. Evans; Mark Corrado Galassi; K. E. McGowan; J.A. Schier; J. W. Asa; S. D. Barthelmy; J. R. Cummings; N. Gehrels; Derek D. Hullinger; Hans A. Krimm; Craig B. Markwardt; K. McLean; David M. Palmer; Ann Marie Parsons; J. Tueller

The prompt optical emission that arrives with the γ-rays from a cosmic γ-ray burst (GRB) is a signature of the engine powering the burst, the properties of the ultra-relativistic ejecta of the explosion, and the ejectas interactions with the surroundings. Until now, only GRB 990123 had been detected at optical wavelengths during the burst phase. Its prompt optical emission was variable and uncorrelated with the prompt γ-ray emission, suggesting that the optical emission was generated by a reverse shock arising from the ejectas collision with surrounding material. Here we report prompt optical emission from GRB 041219a. It is variable and correlated with the prompt γ-rays, indicating a common origin for the optical light and the γ-rays. Within the context of the standard fireball model of GRBs, we attribute this new optical component to internal shocks driven into the burst ejecta by variations of the inner engine. The correlated optical emission is a direct probe of the jet isolated from the medium. The timing of the uncorrelated optical emission is strongly dependent on the nature of the medium.


Nature | 2005

An infrared flash contemporaneous with the γ-rays of GRB 041219a

Cullen H. Blake; J. S. Bloom; D. L. Starr; Emilio E. Falco; M. F. Skrutskie; E. E. Fenimore; G. Duchene; A. Szentgyorgyi; S. Hornstein; Jason X. Prochaska; C. McCabe; Andrea M. Ghez; Quinn Konopacky; Karl R. Stapelfeldt; K. Hurley; R. Campbell; Marc Kassis; F. Chaffee; N. Gehrels; S. D. Barthelmy; J. R. Cummings; Derek D. Hullinger; Hans A. Krimm; Craig B. Markwardt; David M. Palmer; Ann Marie Parsons; K. McLean; J. Tueller

The explosion that results in a cosmic γ-ray burst (GRB) is thought to produce emission from two physical processes: the central engine gives rise to the high-energy emission of the burst through internal shocking, and the subsequent interaction of the flow with the external environment produces long-wavelength afterglows. Although observations of afterglows continue to refine our understanding of GRB progenitors and relativistic shocks, γ-ray observations alone have not yielded a clear picture of the origin of the prompt emission nor details of the central engine. Only one concurrent visible-light transient has been found and it was associated with emission from an external shock. Here we report the discovery of infrared emission contemporaneous with a GRB, beginning 7.2 minutes after the onset of GRB 041219a (ref. 8). We acquired 21 images during the active phase of the burst, yielding early multi-colour observations. Our analysis of the initial infrared pulse suggests an origin consistent with internal shocks.The explosion that results in a cosmic gamma-ray burst (GRB) is thought to produce emission from two physical processes -- the activity of the central engine gives rise to the high-energy emission of the burst through internal shocking and the subsequent interaction of the flow with the external environment produces long-wavelength afterglow. While afterglow observations continue to refine our understanding of GRB progenitors and relativistic shocks, gamma-ray observations alone have not yielded a clear picture of the origin of the prompt emission nor details of the central engine. Only one concurrent visible-light transient has been found and was associated with emission from an external shock. Here we report the discovery of infrared (IR) emission contemporaneous with a GRB, beginning 7.2 minutes after the onset of GRB 041219a. Our robotic telescope acquired 21 images during the active phase of the burst, yielding the earliest multi-colour observations of any long-wavelength emission associated with a GRB. Analysis of an initial IR pulse suggests an origin consistent with internal shocks. This opens a new possibility to study the central engine of GRBs with ground-based observations at long wavelengths.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2006

X-ray flare in XRF 050406: evidence for prolonged engine activity

Patrizia Romano; A. Moretti; P. L. Banat; David N. Burrows; Sergio Campana; Guido Chincarini; S. Covino; Daniele Malesani; Gianpiero Tagliaferri; Shiho Kobayashi; Bing Zhang; A. Falcone; Lorella Angelini; S. D. Barthelmy; A. P. Beardmore; Milvia Capalbi; G. Cusumano; P. Giommi; Mike R. Goad; Olivier Godet; Dirk Grupe; J. E. Hill; J. A. Kennea; V. La Parola; Vanessa Mangano; P. Meszaros; David C. Morris; John A. Nousek; Paul T. O'Brien; Julian P. Osborne

We present observations of XRF 050406, the first burst detected by Swift showing a flare in its X-ray light curve. During this flare, which peaks at


Applied Optics | 1998

Supermirror hard-x-ray telescope

Koujun Yamashita; Peter J. Serlemitsos; J. Tueller; S. D. Barthelmy; Lyle M. Bartlett; Kai-Wing Chan; Akihiro Furuzawa; Neil Gehrels; Kazutoshi Haga; Hideyo Kunieda; Peter Kurczynski; G. S. Lodha; Norio Nakajo; Norihiko Nakamura; Yoshiharu Namba; Yasushi Ogasaka; Takashi Okajima; David M. Palmer; Ann Marie Parsons; Yang Soong; Carl M. Stahl; Harumi Takata; Keisuke Tamura; Yuzuru Tawara; B. J. Teegarden

t_{\rm peak} \sim 210


The Astrophysical Journal | 2008

GLOBAL PROPERTIES OF X-RAY FLASHES AND X-RAY-RICH GAMMA-RAY BURSTS OBSERVED BY SWIFT

Takanori Sakamoto; Derek D. Hullinger; G. Sato; Ryo Yamazaki; Loius M. Barbier; S. D. Barthelmy; J. R. Cummings; E. E. Fenimore; N. Gehrels; Hans A. Krimm; D. Q. Lamb; Craig B. Markwardt; J. P. Osborne; David M. Palmer; Ann Marie Parsons; M. Stamatikos; J. Tueller

s after the BAT trigger, a flux variation of

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S. D. Barthelmy

Goddard Space Flight Center

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J. Tueller

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Hans A. Krimm

Goddard Space Flight Center

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N. Gehrels

Goddard Space Flight Center

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J. R. Cummings

Goddard Space Flight Center

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D. M. Palmer

Universities Space Research Association

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C. B. Markwardt

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Edward E. Fenimore

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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