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Dive into the research topics where Bobing Wu is active.

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Featured researches published by Bobing Wu.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2000

Spectral Lags of Gamma-Ray Bursts From Ginga and BATSE.

Bobing Wu; E. E. Fenimore

The analysis of spectral lag between energy bands, which combines temporal and spectral analyses, can add strict constraints to gamma-ray burst (GRB) models. In previous studies, the lag analysis focused on the lags between channel 1 (25-57 keV) and channel 3 (115-320 keV) from the Burst and Transient Source Experiment (BATSE). In this Letter, we analyzed the cross-correlation average lags (including approximate uncertainties) between energy bands for two GRB samples: 19 events detected by Ginga and 109 events detected by BATSE. We paid special attention to the BATSE GRBs with known redshifts because there has been a reported connection between lag and luminosity. This extends our knowledge of spectral lags to lower energy ( approximately 2 keV). We found that lags between energy bands are small. The lag between the peak of approximately 50 keV photons and that of approximately 200 keV photons is approximately 0.08 s. The upper limit in the lag between approximately 9 and approximately 90 keV photons is approximately 0.5 s. Thus, there are not large shifts at low energy. We found that about 20% of GRBs have detectable lags between energy bands in the Ginga and BATSE samples. From the internal shock model, we found that there are three sources of time structure in GRB pulses: cooling, hydrodynamics, and angular effects. We argue that cooling is much too fast to account for our observed lags and that angular effects are independent of energy. Thus, only hydrodynamics can produce these lags. Perhaps the radiation process varies as the reverse shock moves through the shell.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1999

GRB 990123: Evidence that the Gamma Rays Come from a Central Engine

E. E. Fenimore; E. Ramirez-Ruiz; Bobing Wu

GRB 990123 was a long, complex gamma-ray burst with an optical transient that started early within the gamma-ray phase. The peak and power-law decay of the early optical emission strongly indicate the presence of a decelerating relativistic shell during that phase. Prior to this burst, it was not known if the shell decelerated during the burst, so an external shock origin for the gamma rays was still possible. If the gamma rays are produced in the external shock, then the pulse widths should reflect the observed deceleration of the shell and increase by a factor between 1.25 and 2.3, depending on the angular extent of the shell. We analyze the fine time structure observed in the gamma-ray data from BATSE and determine that the width of the peaks does not increase as expected for a decelerating shell; the later pulses are only 1.034±0.035 longer than the earlier pulses. The lack of pulse width evolution eliminates the only remaining kinematically acceptable external shock explanation for the gamma-ray phase and, thus, the gamma rays must originate at a central engine.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

The Chinese-French SVOM Mission: studying the brightest astronomical explosions

Olivier Godet; J. Paul; J. Y. Wei; Shuang-Nan Zhang; Jean-Luc Atteia; S. Basa; Didier Barret; A. Claret; Bertrand Cordier; J.-G. Cuby; Z. Dai; F. Daigne; J. Deng; Yongwei Dong; Diego Gotz; J. Hu; P. Mandrou; J. P. Osborne; Y. Qiu; J. Wang; Bobing Wu; C. Wu; W. Yuan

We present the SVOM mission that the Chinese National Space Agency and the French Space Agency have decided to jointly implement. SVOM has been designed to detect, characterise and quickly localise gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) and other types of high-energy transients. For this task the spacecraft will carry two widefield high-energy instruments: ECLAIRs, a hard X-ray imager, and the Gamma-Ray Monitor, a broadband spectrometer. Upon localising a transient, SVOM will quickly slew towards the source and start deep followup observations with two narrow-field telescopes: the Micro-channel X-ray Telescope in X-rays and the Visible Telescope in the visible. The nearly anti-solar pointing of SVOM combined with the fast transmission of GRB positions to the ground in less than 1 minute, will facilitate the observations of SVOM transients by the largest ground based telescopes.


Astroparticle Physics | 2016

Perspective of monochromatic gamma-ray line detection with the High Energy cosmic-Radiation Detection (HERD) facility onboard China’s space station

Xiaoyuan Huang; Anna S. Lamperstorfer; Yue-Lin Sming Tsai; Ming Xu; Qiang Yuan; Jin Chang; Yongwei Dong; Bing-Liang Hu; Jun-Guang Lü; Le Wang; Bobing Wu; Shuang-Nan Zhang

HERD is the High Energy cosmic-Radiation Detection instrument proposed to operate onboard Chinas space station in the 2020s. It is designed to detect energetic cosmic ray nuclei, leptons and photons with a high energy resolution (similar to 1% for electrons and photons and 20% for nuclei) and a large geometry factor (>3 m(2) sr for electrons and diffuse photons and > [2]m(2) sr for nuclei). In this work we discuss the capability of HERD to detect monochromatic gamma-ray lines, based on simulations of the detector performance. It is shown that HERD will be one of the most sensitive instruments for monochromatic gamma-ray searches at energies between similar to 10 to a few hundred GeV. Above hundreds of GeV, Cherenkov telescopes will be more sensitive due to their large effective area. As a specific example, we show that a good portion of the parameter space of a supersymmetric dark matter model can be probed with HERD


arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2015

The SVOM gamma-ray burst mission

Bertrand Cordier; Jun-Jie Wei; Jean-Luc Atteia; S. Basa; A. Claret; F. Daigne; J. S. Deng; Yongwei Dong; O. Godet; A. Goldwurm; Diego Gotz; Xu-Hui Han; Alain Klotz; Cyril Lachaud; Julian P. Osborne; Yulei Qiu; S. Schanne; Bobing Wu; Jingxiu Wang; C. Wu; L. P. Xin; Bing Zhang; Shuang-Nan Zhang

We briefly present the science capabilities, the instruments, the operations, and the expected performance of the SVOM mission. SVOM (Space-based multiband astronomical Variable Objects Monitor) is a Chinese-French space mission dedicated to the study of Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) in the next decade. The SVOM mission encompasses a satellite carrying four instruments to detect and localize the prompt GRB emission and measure the evolution of the afterglow in the visible band and in X-rays, a VHF communication system enabling the fast transmission of SVOM alerts to the ground, and a ground segment including a wide angle camera and two follow-up telescopes. The pointing strategy of the satellite has been optimized to favor the detection of GRBs located in the night hemisphere. This strategy enables the study of the optical emission in the first minutes after the GRB with robotic observatories and the early spectroscopy of the optical afterglow with large telescopes to measure the redshifts. The study of GRBs in the next decade will benefit from a number of large facilities in all wavelengths that will contribute to increase the scientific return of the mission. Finally, SVOM will operate in the era of the next generation of gravitational wave detectors, greatly contributing to searches for the electromagnetic counterparts of gravitational wave triggers at Xray and gamma-ray energies.


arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2009

SVOM: a new mission for Gamma‐Ray Burst Studies

Diego Gotz; Jacques Paul; S. Basa; J. Wei; S. N. Zhang; Jean-Luc Atteia; Didier Barret; Bertrand Cordier; A. Claret; J. Deng; Xiaohui Fan; J. Y. Hu; M. Huang; P. Mandrou; S. Mereghetti; Y. Qiu; Bobing Wu

We present the SVOM (Space‐based multi‐band astronomical Variable Object Monitor) mission, that is being developed in cooperation between the Chinese National Space Agency (CNSA), the Chinese Academy of Science (CAS) and the French Space Agency (CNES), and is expected to be launched in 2013. Its scientific objectives include the study of the GRB phenomenon (diversity and unity), GRB physics (particle acceleration, radiation mechanisms), GRB progenitors, cosmology (host galaxies, intervening medium, star formation history, re‐ionization, cosmological parameters), and fundamental physics (origin of cosmic rays, Lorentz invariance, gravitational waves sources). SVOM is designed to detect all known types of Gamma‐Ray Bursts (GRBs), to provide fast and reliable GRB positions, to measure the broadband spectral characteristics and temporal properties of the GRB prompt emission. This will be obtained in first place thanks to a set of four space flown instruments. A wide field (∼2 sr) coded mask telescope (ECLAIRs...


Astroparticle Physics | 2016

A crosstalk and non-uniformity correction method for the space-borne Compton polarimeter POLAR

Hualin Xiao; Wojtek Hajdas; Bobing Wu; N. Produit; Tianwei Bao; T. Batsch; F. Cadoux; Junying Chai; Yongwei Dong; M. N. Kong; Siwei Kong; D. Rybka; Catherine Leluc; Lu Li; Jiangtao Liu; Xin Liu; R. Marcinkowski; Mercedes Paniccia; M. Pohl; D. Rapin; Haoli Shi; Liming Song; Jianchao Sun; Jacek Szabelski; Ruijie Wang; X. Wen; Hanhui Xu; Laiyu Zhang; Li Zhang; Shuang-Nan Zhang

Abstract In spite of extensive observations and numerous theoretical studies in the past decades several key questions related with Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRB) emission mechanisms are still to be answered. Precise detection of the GRB polarization carried out by dedicated instruments can provide new data and be an ultimate tool to unveil their real nature. A novel space-borne Compton polarimeter POLAR onboard the Chinese space station TG2 is designed to measure linear polarization of gamma-rays arriving from GRB prompt emissions. POLAR uses plastics scintillator bars (PS) as gamma-ray detectors and multi-anode photomultipliers (MAPMTs) for readout of the scintillation light. Inherent properties of such detection systems are crosstalk and non-uniformity. The crosstalk smears recorded energy over multiple channels making both non-uniformity corrections and energy calibration more difficult. Rigorous extraction of polarization observables requires to take such effects properly into account. We studied influence of the crosstalk on energy depositions during laboratory measurements with X-ray beams. A relation between genuine and recorded energy was deduced using an introduced model of data analysis. It postulates that both the crosstalk and non-uniformities can be described with a single matrix obtained in calibrations with mono-energetic X- and gamma-rays. Necessary corrections are introduced using matrix based equations allowing for proper evaluation of the measured GRB spectra. Validity of the method was established during dedicated experimental tests. The same approach can be also applied in space utilizing POLAR internal calibration sources. The introduced model is general and with some adjustments well suitable for data analysis from other MAPMT-based instruments.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2018

Design and construction of the POLAR detector

N. Produit; Tianwei Bao; T. Batsch; T. Bernasconi; I. Britvich; F. Cadoux; I. Cernuda; Junying Chai; Yongwei Dong; N. Gauvin; Wojtek Hajdas; Merlin Kole; M. N. Kong; R. Kramert; Li Li; Jing Liu; X. Liu; R. Marcinkowski; S. Orsi; M. Pohl; D. Rapin; D. Rybka; A. Rutczynska; Haoli Shi; P. Socha; Jianchao Sun; Longlong Song; Jacek Szabelski; I. Traseira; Hualin Xiao

Abstract The POLAR detector is a space based Gamma Ray Burst (GRB) polarimeter with a wide field of view, which covers almost half the sky. The instrument uses Compton scattering of gamma rays on a plastic scintillator hodoscope to measure the polarization of the incoming photons. The instrument has been successfully launched on board of the Chinese space laboratory Tiangong 2 on September 15, 2016. The construction of the instrument components is described in this article. Details are provided on problems encountered during the construction phase and their solutions. Initial performance of the instrument in orbit is as expected from ground tests and Monte Carlo simulation.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Monte Carlo Simulation of HERD Calorimeter

Min Xu; G. M. Chen; Yongwei Dong; J. G. Lu; Z. Quan; Lihong V. Wang; Z. G. Wang; Bobing Wu; Shuangnan Zhang

The High Energy cosmic-Radiation Detection (HERD) facility onboard Chinas Space Station is planned for operation starting around 2020 for about 10 years. It is designed as a next generation space facility focused on indirect dark matter search, precise cosmic ray spectrum and composition measurements up to the knee energy, and high energy gamma-ray monitoring and survey. The calorimeter plays an essential role in the main scientific objectives of HERD. A 3-D cubic calorimeter filled with high granularity crystals as active material is a very promising choice for the calorimeter. HERD is mainly composed of a 3-D calorimeter (CALO) surrounded by silicon trackers (TK) from all five sides except the bottom. CALO is made of 9261 cubes of LYSO crystals, corresponding to about 55 radiation lengths and 3 nuclear interaction lengths, respectively. Here the simulation results of the performance of CALO with GEANT4 and FLUKA are presented: 1) the total absorption CALO and its absorption depth for precise energy measurements (energy resolution: 1% for electrons and gammarays beyond 100 GeV, 20% for protons from 100 GeV to 1 PeV); 2) its granularity for particle identification (electron/proton separation power better than 10-5); 3) the homogenous geometry for detecting particles arriving from every unblocked direction for large effective geometrical factor (<3 m2sr for electron and diffuse gammarays, >2 m2sr for cosmic ray nuclei); 4) expected observational results such as gamma-ray line spectrum from dark matter annihilation and spectrum measurement of various cosmic ray chemical components.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

The POLAR gamma-ray burst polarimeter onboard the Chinese Spacelab

S. Orsi; F. Cadoux; Catherine Leluc; Mercedes Paniccia; M. Pohl; D. Rapin; N. Gauvin; N. Produit; Tianwei Bao; Junying Chai; Yongwei Dong; M. N. Kong; Li Lu; Jiangtao Liu; Xin Liu; Haoli Shi; Jianchao Sun; Ruijie Wang; X. Wen; Bobing Wu; Hualin Xiao; Hanhui Xu; Li Zhang; Laiyu Zhang; Shuang-Nan Zhang; Yongjie Zhang; Ilia Britvich; Wojtek Hajdas; Radoslaw Marcinkowski; D. Rybka

POLAR is a joint European-Chinese experiment aimed at a precise measurement of hard X-ray polarization (50-500 keV) of the prompt emission of Gamma-Ray Bursts. The main aim is a better understanding of the geometry of astrophysical sources and of the X-ray emission mechanisms. POLAR is a compact Compton polarimeter characterized by a large modulation factor, effective area, and field of view. It consists of 1600 low-Z plastic scintillator bars read out by 25 at-panel multi-anode photomultipliers. The incoming X-rays undergo Compton scattering in the bars and produce a modulation pattern; experiments with polarized synchrotron radiation and GEANT4 Monte Carlo simulations have shown that the polarization degree and angle can be retrieved from this pattern with the accuracy necessary for identifying the GRB mechanism. The flight model of POLAR is currently under construction in Geneva. The POLAR instrument will be placed onboard the Chinese spacelab TG-2, scheduled for launch in low Earth orbit in 2015. The main milestones of the space qualification campaign will be described in the paper.

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Yongwei Dong

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Tianwei Bao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jianchao Sun

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Ruijie Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Haoli Shi

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Hualin Xiao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Junying Chai

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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X. Wen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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