S. Sreekumar
Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre
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Featured researches published by S. Sreekumar.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015
S. V. Vadawale; T. Chattopadhyay; A. R. Rao; D. Bhattacharya; Varun Bhalerao; N. Vagshette; P. Pawar; S. Sreekumar
X-ray polarimetry is largely an unexplored area of an otherwise mature field of X-ray astronomy. Except for a few early attempts during the 1970s, no dedicated X-ray polarimeter has been flown during the past four decades. On the other hand, the scientific value of X-ray polarization measurement has been well known for a long time, and there has been significant technical progress in developing sensitive X-ray polarimeters in recent years. But there are no approved dedicated X-ray polarimetric experiments to be flown in the near future, so it is important to explore the polarimetric capabilities of other existing or planned instruments and examine whether they can provide significant astrophysical polarization measurements. In this paper, we present experimental results to show that the CZTI instrument onboard the forthcoming Indian astronomy mission, Astrosat, will be able to provide sensitive measurements of X-ray polarization in the energy range of 100 300 keV. CZTI will be able to constrain any intrinsic polarization greater than 40% for bright X-ray sources (>500 mCrab) within a short exposure of 100 ks with a 3-sigma confidence level. We show that this seemingly “modest” sensitivity can play a very significant role in addressing long pending questions, such as the contribution of relativistic jets to hard X-rays in black hole binaries and X-ray emission mechanism and geometry in X-ray pulsars.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
A. R. Rao; Vikas Chand; M. K. Hingar; S. Iyyani; Rakesh Khanna; A. P. K. Kutty; J. P. Malkar; D. Paul; V. Bhalerao; D. Bhattacharya; Gulab C. Dewangan; Pramod Pawar; A. Vibhute; T. Chattopadhyay; N. P. S. Mithun; S. V. Vadawale; N. Vagshette; R. Basak; P. Pradeep; Essy Samuel; S. Sreekumar; P. Vinod; K. H. Navalgund; R. Pandiyan; K. S. Sarma; S. Seetha; K. Subbarao
AstroSat is a multi-wavelength satellite launched on 2015 September 28. The CZT Imager of AstroSat on its very first day of operation detected a long duration gamma-ray burst (GRB) namely GRB 151006A. Using the off-axis imaging and spectral response of the instrument, we demonstrate that CZT Imager can localise this GRB correct to about a few degrees and it can provide, in conjunction with Swift, spectral parameters similar to that obtained from Fermi/GBM. Hence CZT Imager would be a useful addition to the currently operating GRB instruments (Swift and Fermi). Specifically, we argue that the CZT Imager will be most useful for the short hard GRBs by providing localisation for those detected by Fermi and spectral information for those detected only by Swift. We also provide preliminary results on a new exciting capability of this instrument: CZT Imager is able to identify Compton scattered events thereby providing polarisation information for bright GRBs. GRB 151006A, in spite of being relatively faint, shows hints of a polarisation signal at 100-300 keV (though at a low significance level). We point out that CZT Imager should provide significant time resolved polarisation measurements for GRBs that have fluence 3 times higher than that of GRB 151006A. We estimate that the number of such bright GRBs detectable by CZT Imager is 5 - 6 per year. CZT Imager can also act as a good hard X-ray monitoring device for possible electromagnetic counterparts of Gravitational Wave events.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2010
A. R. Rao; J. P. Malkar; M. K. Hingar; V. K. Agrawal; Sandip K. Chakrabarti; Anuj Nandi; Dipak Debnath; T. B. Kotoch; T. R. Chidambaram; P. Vinod; S. Sreekumar; Yu. D. Kotov; A. S. Buslov; V. N. Yurov; V. G. Tyshkevich; A. I. Arkhangel'Skij; R. A. Zyatkov; S. Shaheda Begum; P. K. Manoharan
We present the results of an analysis of hard X-ray observations of the C2.7 solar flare detected by the RT-2 experiment on board the Coronas-Photon satellite. We detect hard X-ray pulsations at periods of {approx}12 s and {approx}15 s. We find a marginal evidence for a decrease in period with time. We have augmented these results using the publicly available data from the RHESSI satellite. We present a spectral analysis and measure the spectral parameters.
Experimental Astronomy | 2011
S. Sreekumar; P. Vinod; Essy Samuel; J. P. Malkar; A. R. Rao; M. K. Hingar; V. P. Madhav; Dipak Debnath; T. B. Kotoch; Anuj Nandi; S. Shaheda Begum; Sandip K. Chakrabarti
The onboard software and data communication in the RT-2 Experiment onboard the Coronas–Photon satellite is organized in a hierarchical way to effectively handle and communicate asynchronous data generated by the X-ray detectors. A flexible data handling system is organized in the X-ray detector packages themselves and the processing electronic device, namely RT-2/E, has the necessary intelligence to communicate with the three scientific payloads by issuing commands and receiving data. It has direct interfacing with the Satellite systems and issues commands to the detectors and processes the detector data before sending to the satellite systems. The onboard software is configured with several novel features like (a) device independent communication scheme, (b) loss-less data compression and (c) Digital Signal Processor. Functionality of the onboard software along with the data structure, command structure, complex processing scheme etc. are discussed in this paper.
Experimental Astronomy | 2011
Dipak Debnath; Anuj Nandi; A. R. Rao; J. P. Malkar; M. K. Hingar; T. B. Kotoch; S. Sreekumar; V. P. Madhav; Sandip K. Chakrabarti
Phoswich detectors (RT-2/S & RT-2/G) are major scientific payloads of the RT-2 Experiment onboard the CORONAS-PHOTON mission, which was launched into a polar Low Earth Orbit of around 550 km on 2009 January 30. These RT-2 instruments are designed and developed to observe solar flares in hard X-rays and to understand the energy transport processes associated with these flares. Apart from this, these instruments are capable of observing Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) and Cosmic diffuse X-ray background (CDXRB). Both detectors consist of identical NaI(Tl) and CsI(Na) scintillation crystals in a Phoswich combination, having the same diameter (116 mm) but different thicknesses. The normal working energy range is from 15 keV to 150 keV, but may be extendable up to ~1 MeV. In this paper, we present the RT-2/S and RT-2/G instruments and discuss their testing and calibration results. We used different radio-active sources to calibrate both detectors. The radio-active source 57Co (122 keV) is used for onboard calibration of both instruments. During its lifetime (∼3–5 years), RT-2 is expected to cover the peak of the 24th solar cycle.
Solar System Research | 2011
A. R. Rao; J. P. Malkar; M. K. Hingar; V. K. Agrawal; Sandip K. Chakrabarti; Anuj Nandi; Dipak Debnath; T. B. Kotoch; R. Sarkar; T. R. Chidambaram; P. Vinod; S. Sreekumar; Yu. D. Kotov; A. S. Buslov; V. N. Yurov; V. G. Tyshkevich; A. I. Arkhangelsky; R. A. Zyatkov
The RT-2 Experiment onboard the CORONAS-PHOTON satellite is designed to study the spectral, temporal, and spatial details of solar hard X-ray flares in the 15–150 keV range. Above this energy (and upto 1000 keV), it also acts as an omni-directional gamma-ray detector with a capability to study gamma-ray bursts (GRB), bright solar flares, and X-ray pulsars. With an ensemble of hard X-ray detectors with different fields of view and coding devices, it also has the capability to investigate the spectrum of Cosmic Diffuse X-ray Background. The performance of the detectors from 2009 February to November is described in this paper. Results obtained on a few GRBs and solar flares are also briefly discussed.
Journal of Astrophysics and Astronomy | 2017
Varun Bhalerao; D. Bhattacharya; A. Vibhute; Pramod Pawar; A. R. Rao; M. K. Hingar; Rakesh Khanna; A. P. K. Kutty; J. P. Malkar; M. H. Patil; Y. K. Arora; S. Sinha; P. Priya; Essy Samuel; S. Sreekumar; P. Vinod; N. P. S. Mithun; S. V. Vadawale; N. D. Vagshette; K. H. Navalgund; K. S. Sarma; R. Pandiyan; S. Seetha; K. Subbarao
Experimental Astronomy | 2014
T. Chattopadhyay; S. V. Vadawale; A. R. Rao; S. Sreekumar; D. Bhattacharya
Nature Astronomy | 2018
S. V. Vadawale; T. Chattopadhyay; N. P. S. Mithun; A. R. Rao; D. Bhattacharya; A. Vibhute; V. B. Bhalerao; Gulab C. Dewangan; Ranjeev Misra; Biswajit Paul; A. Basu; B. C. Joshi; S. Sreekumar; Essy Samuel; P. Priya; P. Vinod; S. Seetha
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2009
Anuj Nandi; A. R. Rao; Sandip K. Chakrabarti; J. P. Malkar; S. Sreekumar; Dipak Debnath; M. K. Hingar; T. B. Kotoch; Yuri Kotovk; A.I. Arkhangelskiy