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Dive into the research topics where M. S. Briggs is active.

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Featured researches published by M. S. Briggs.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1993

BATSE observations of gamma-ray burst spectra. I: Spectral diversity

J. L. Matteson; L. A. Ford; Bradley E. Schaefer; David M. Palmer; B. J. Teegarden; T. L. Cline; M. S. Briggs; W. S. Paciesas; Geoffrey N. Pendleton; G. Fishman; C. Kouveliotou; Charles A. Meegan; Richard Wilson; P. Lestrade

We studied the time-averaged gamma-ray burst spectra accumulated by the spectroscopy detectors of the Burst and Transient Source Experiment. The spectra are described well at low energy by a power-law continuum with an exponential cutoff and by a steeper power law at high energy. However, the spectral parameters vary from burst to burst with no universal values. The break in the spectrum ranges from below 100 keV to more than 1 MeV, but peaks below 200 keV with only a small fraction of the spectra breaking above 400 keV; it is therefore unlikely that a majority of the burst spectra are shaped directly by pair processes, unless bursts originate from a broad redshift range. The correlations among burst parameters do not fulfill the predictions of the cosmological models of burst origin. No correlations with burst morphology or the spatial distribution were found. We demonstrate the importance of using a complete spectral description even if a partial description (e.g., a model without a high-energy tail) is statistically satisfactory.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1993

Identification of two classes of gamma-ray bursts

C. Kouveliotou; Charles A. Meegan; G. J. Fishman; Narayana P. Bhat; M. S. Briggs; Thomas M. Koshut; W. S. Paciesas; Geoffrey N. Pendleton

We have studied the duration distribution of the gamma-ray bursts of the first BATSE catalog. We find a bimodality in the distribution, which separates GRBs into two classes: short events (less than 2 s) and longer ones (more than 2 s). Both sets are distributed isotropically and inhomogeneously in the sky. We find that their durations are anticorrelated with their spectral hardness ratios: short GRBs are predominantly harder, and longer ones tend to be softer. Our results provide a first GRB classification scheme based on a combination of the GRB temporal and spectral properties.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

The Fermi gamma-ray burst monitor

Charles A. Meegan; Giselher G. Lichti; P. N. Bhat; E. Bissaldi; M. S. Briggs; V. Connaughton; R. Diehl; G. J. Fishman; J. Greiner; Andrew S. Hoover; Alexander Jonathan Van Der Horst; Andreas von Kienlin; R. Marc Kippen; C. Kouveliotou; Sheila McBreen; W. S. Paciesas; Robert B. Preece; H. Steinle; M. Wallace; Robert B. Wilson; C. Wilson-Hodge

The Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor (GBM) will significantly augment the science return from the Fermi Observatory in the study of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). The primary objective of GBM is to extend the energy range over which bursts are observed downward from the energy range of the Large Area Telescope (LAT) on Fermi into the hard X-ray range where extensive previous data sets exist. A secondary objective is to compute burst locations onboard to allow re-orienting the spacecraft so that the LAT can observe delayed emission from bright bursts. GBM uses an array of 12 sodium iodide scintillators and two bismuth germanate scintillators to detect gamma rays from ~8 keV to ~40 MeV over the full unocculted sky. The onboard trigger threshold is ~0.7 photons cm–2 s–1 (50-300 keV, 1 s peak). GBM generates onboard triggers for ~250 GRBs per year.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 1999

The Fourth BATSE Gamma-Ray Burst Catalog (Revised)

W. S. Paciesas; Charles A. Meegan; Geoffrey N. Pendleton; M. S. Briggs; C. Kouveliotou; Thomas M. Koshut; John Patrick Lestrade; Michael L. McCollough; Jerome J. Brainerd; Jon Hakkila; William Henze; Robert D. Preece; V. Connaughton; R. Marc Kippen; Robert S. Mallozzi; G. J. Fishman; Georgia Ann Richardson; Maitrayee Sahi

The Burst and Transient Source Experiment (BATSE) on the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (CGRO) has triggered on 1637 cosmic gamma-ray bursts between 1991 April 19 and 1996 August 29. These events constitute the Fourth BATSE burst catalog. The current version (4Br) has been revised from the version first circulated on CD-ROM in 1997 September (4B) to include improved locations for a subset of bursts that have been reprocessed using additional data. A significant difference from previous BATSE catalogs is the inclusion of bursts from periods when the trigger energy range differed from the nominal 50-300 keV. We present tables of the burst occurrence times, locations, peak fluxes, fluences, and durations. In general, results from previous BATSE catalogs are confirmed here with greater statistical significance.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2006

The Complete Spectral Catalog of Bright BATSE Gamma-Ray Bursts

Y. Kaneko; Robert D. Preece; M. S. Briggs; W. S. Paciesas; Charles A. Meegan; David L. Band

We present a systematic spectral analysis of 350 bright gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) observed with the Burst and Transient Source Experiment (BATSE; ~30 keV-2 MeV) with high temporal and spectral resolution. Our sample was selected from the complete set of 2704 BATSE GRBs based on their energy fluence or peak photon flux values to assure good statistics and included 17 short GRBs. To obtain well-constrained spectral parameters, several photon models were used to fit each spectrum. We compared spectral parameters resulting from the fits using different models, and the spectral parameters that best represent each spectrum were statistically determined, taking into account the parameterization differences among the models. A thorough analysis was performed on 350 time-integrated and 8459 time-resolved burst spectra, and the effects of integration times in determining the spectral parameters were explored. Using the results, we studied correlations among spectral parameters and their evolution pattern within each burst. The resulting spectral catalog is the most comprehensive study of spectral properties of GRB prompt emission to date and is available electronically from the High-Energy Astrophysics Science Archive Research Center (HEASARC). The catalog provides reliable constraints on particle acceleration and emission mechanisms in GRBs.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1998

The Synchrotron Shock Model Confronts a “Line of Death” in the BATSE Gamma-Ray Burst Data

Robert D. Preece; M. S. Briggs; Robert S. Mallozzi; Geoffrey N. Pendleton; W. S. Paciesas; David L. Band

The synchrotron shock model (SSM) for gamma-ray burst emission makes a testable prediction: that the observed low-energy power-law photon number spectral index cannot exceed -2/3 (where the photon model is defined with a positive index:


The Astrophysical Journal | 1995

BATSE observations of gamma-ray burst spectra. 2: Peak energy evolution in bright, long bursts

L. A. Ford; David L. Band; J. L. Matteson; M. S. Briggs; Geoffrey N. Pendleton; Robert D. Preece; W. S. Paciesas; B. J. Teegarden; David M. Palmer; Bradley E. Schaefer

dN/dE \propto E{alpha}


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 1996

The Third BATSE Gamma-Ray Burst Catalog

Charles A. Meegan; Geoffrey N. Pendleton; M. S. Briggs; C. Kouveliotou; Thomas M. Koshut; John Patrick Lestrade; W. S. Paciesas; Michael L. McCollough; Jerome J. Brainerd; John M. Horack; Jon Hakkila; William Henze; Robert D. Preece; Robert S. Mallozzi; G. J. Fishman

). We have collected time-resolved spectral fit parameters for over 100 bright bursts observed by the Burst And Transient Source Experiment on board the {\it Compton Gamma Ray Observatory}. Using this database, we find 23 bursts in which the spectral index limit of the SSM is violated, We discuss elements of the analysis methodology that affect the robustness of this result, as well as some of the escape hatches left for the SSM by theory.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 1994

The first BATSE gamma-ray burst catalog

G. J. Fishman; Charles A. Meegan; Robert B. Wilson; M. N. Brock; John M. Horack; C. Kouveliotou; Sethanne Howard; W. S. Paciesas; M. S. Briggs; Geoffrey N. Pendleton

We investigate spectral evolution in 37 bright, long gamma-ray bursts observed with the Burst and Transient Source Experiment (BATSE) spectroscopy detectors. High-resolution spectra are chracterized by the energy of the peak of nu F(sub nu), and the evolution of this quantity is examined relative to the emission intensity. In most cases it is found that this peak energy either rises with or slightly precedes major intensity increases and softens for the remainder of the pulse. Interpulse emission is generally harder early in the burst. For bursts with multiple intensity pulses, later spikes tend to be softer than earlier ones, indicating that the energy of the peak of nu F(sub nu) is bounded by an envelope which decays with time. Evidence is found that bursts in which the bulk of the flux comes well after the event which triggers the instrument tend to show less peak energy variability and are not as hard as several bursts in which the emission occurs promptly after the trigger. Several recently proposed burst models are examined in light of these results and no qualitative conflicts with the observations presented here are found.


Nature | 2003

A |[gamma]|-ray burst with a high-energy spectral component inconsistent with the synchrotron shock model

M. M. González; B. L. Dingus; Y. Kaneko; Robert D. Preece; C. D. Dermer; M. S. Briggs

The Burst and Transient Source Experiment (BATSE) on the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (CGRO) has triggered on 1122 cosmic gamma-ray bursts between 1991 April 19 and 1994 September 19. These events constitute the Third BATSE (3B) burst catalog. This catalog includes the events previously reported in the 2B catalog, which covered the time interval 1991 April 19 to 1993 March 9. We present tables of the burst occurrence times, locations, peak fluxes, fluences, and durations. In general, results from previous BATSE catalogs are confirmed here with greater statistical significance. The angular distribution is consistent with isotropy. The mean galactic dipole and quadrupole moments are within 0.6 a and 0.3 a, respectively, of the values expected for isotropy. The intensity distribution is not consistent with a homogeneous distribution of burst sources, with V/V(sub max) = 0.33 +/- 0.01. The duration distribution (T(sub 90)) exhibits bimodality, with peaks at approx. 0.5 and approx. 30 s. There is no compelling evidence for burst repetition, but only weak limits can be placed on the repetition rate.

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W. S. Paciesas

Universities Space Research Association

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Robert D. Preece

Marshall Space Flight Center

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Charles A. Meegan

University of Alabama in Huntsville

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V. Connaughton

Universities Space Research Association

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G. J. Fishman

Marshall Space Flight Center

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Geoffrey N. Pendleton

University of Alabama in Huntsville

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C. Kouveliotou

Universities Space Research Association

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P. N. Bhat

University of Alabama in Huntsville

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C. Wilson-Hodge

Marshall Space Flight Center

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