Compton Gamma Ray Observatory Status Report #204
Monday May 12, 1997
Questions or comments can be sent to
Chris Shrader at the CGRO-SSC.
Phone: 301/286-8434
e-mail: shrader@grossc.gsfc.nasa.gov
Guest Investigator News
The Fourth Compton Symposium was held in Williamsburg VA last month.
Nearly 300 scientists from the US and abroad participated, and a wide range of
exciting new science was presented. The meeting included several press events,
one of which, involving a new source of spatially extended 511-keV line
emission in the galactic center region, led to prominent coverage by several
major newspapers and news magazines. Some additional details are presented in
the OSSE instrument team report below. The proceedings will be published
through the American Institute of Physics. Release is targeted for the Fall 1997
time frame.
Cycle-7 proposals are due one month from today. The Cycle-7 NASA Research
Announcement (NRA) is available on the World Wide Web through Goddard
(http://cossc.gsfc.nasa.gov) or NASA Headquarters
(http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/oss). Paper copies are also available by
contacting the CGRO-SSC (barnes@grossc.gsfc.nasa,gov). Proposal forms must
be prepared electronically and submitted BOTH electronically and as hard copy.
You must accomplish this using the Remote Proposal Submission (RPS) system,
which is accessible through the Web, or e-mail (end a black e-mail message to
rps@legacy.gsfc.nasa.gov for instructions). Address questions about RPS to Paul
Barrett (barrett@compass.gsfc.nasa.gov).
Proposals will be evaluated by peer review in August, and an observing time line
will be constructed in late August or September after which selections will be
announced. Direct any questions about the Cycle-7 NRA, the proposal
submission procedure or the Cycle-7 program to Chris Shrader
(shrader@grossc.gsfc.nasa.gov).
Instrument Team Reports
EGRET
EGRET participated in the Target of Opportunity observation of MRK 501 that
was seen flaring by ground-based high energy detectors. Since no one had
proposed for this source, the photon data was made public on April 18 when the
final processing was completed.
The EGRET team participated in the 4th Compton Symposium by offering
several posters and talks. Invited review papers are also in preparation for the
Proceedings.
The EGRET spark chamber is disabled for the viewing periods until August
except for burst triggered intervals. The TASC however is active.
Deliveries of archived and GI data are on schedule.
COMPTEL
The COMPTEL instrument is performing well and continues routine
observations. Since the recent reboost of the CGRO spacecraft, the COMPTEL
operations group has noted an increase in event count-rates, occasionally
reaching the available telemetry limit for the highest-priority events
("Gamma-1"). The elevated count-rates are presumably due to the increased
radiation environment at the newer, higher orbital altitudes. This rate increase
will be closely followed and studied in the coming weeks, but no action is
planned prior to the circularization of the CGRO orbit in June.
An accelerated processing is currently underway of the data associated with the
recent target-of-opportunity observation of MRK 501. These results from
COMPTEL will be posted on the WWW pages of the collaboration as soon as
available.
The collaboration extends compliments to the organizers of the recent 4th
Compton Symposium in Williamsburg for a job well done, and for a most
enjoyable meeting. On a more sober note, serious preparations are now
underway within the team for the CGRO Cycle 7 proposal round.
OSSE
OSSE operations are currently normal. The instrument is working as designed,
with all subsystems in complete and full operation.
Members of the OSSE team were part of the local organizing committee for the
4th Compton Symposium held in Williamsburg, VA, April 28-30. We were
very pleased with the large turnout and the tremendous number of interesting
scientific results presented by the large high-energy astrophysics community.
The highlight of the OSSE results, new maps of the 511 keV positron radiation,
was presented in an oral session and at a press conference held at the
Symposium. These maps show a significant asymmetric enhancement of
emission which appears to extend up to ~10 degrees above the galactic center
region. While the exact morphology of the enhancement is not yet known,
several possible production and ejection mechanisms have been suggested.
These include enhanced supernova activity in the galactic center region during
the past 10^5-10^6 years, pair jets originating from an accreting black hole, or a
gamma ray burst-like event in the galactic center region. The enhancement may
not originate near the galactic center region, however, but rather represent a site
of more local origin. The 511 keV mapping results are also important because
they demonstrate a new and useful mapping capability for the OSSE instrument.
The mapping team working on these results included William Purcell from
Northwestern University, Robert Kinzer, James Kurfess and Jeffery Skibo from
the Naval Research Laboratory, David Dixon from the University of California,
Riverside, Lingxiang Cheng and Marvin Leventhal from the University of
Maryland, David Smith from the University of California at Berkeley, Jack
Tueller from the Goddard Space Flight Center, and Michael Saunders from
Stanford University. The scientific results have been submitted to the
Astrophysical Journal.
Public interest in the story has been very high. So far, the "antimatter
cloud" story has appeared in over 30 U.S. publications, including Time,
Newsweek, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, and a front-page story
in the New York Times, as well as several television news reports and numerous
international publications.
For more details and summaries of the press coverage, see the Web site
Bursts, flares, and transients through 3 May 1997 have been processed. There
were 36 classical gamma-ray burst triggers in the one-month period since the last
burst summary, of which six were slew triggers. Three occurred while slewing
was disabled around the reboost. Of the three remaining bursts, two were
well-located on the scan plane (compared to the final ground-based position);
both were fairly far off the scan plane, but 6167 was still seen at the 36%
response level. Two other events (6190, 6214) were observed by OSSE in the
FOV near the time of the burst, at 43% and 6% responses. Further analysis of
these events is in progress. Two new IPN locations were near the scan plane but
not in the FOV. The new bursts are available on the burst web site
.
OSSE data on GRB 970228, along with pointers to GRB 970228 data and
preprints on the web can be found at
Recent observations are listed in the following table.
617.8 9-15 Apr Mrk 501 (public TOO)
Cas A (public)
618 15 Apr - 6 May
Carina region (D. Grabelsky)
NGC 4507 (G. Madejski)
NGC 918 (public)
619 6-28 May Cir X-1 (N. Brandt)
PSR 1509-58 (S. Matz)
PKS 0521-365 (public)
Low-level OSSE data products through viewing period 513 are awaiting delivery
to the Compton GRO Science Support Center archive. High-level data products
through viewing period 220 have been delivered. In addition, by special request
all subsequent public Cyg X-1 data sets, both low and high level, have been
delivered. Public data and high-level products from the Mrk 501 TOO should be
ready for delivery to the archive within a few weeks. Refer to the CGRO-SSC
page on the WWW , or contact Tom Bridgman
(bridgman@grossc.gsfc.nasa.gov) for more information.
BATSE
The following has been submitted as an IAU cirular:
C.R. Robinson, S.N. Zhang, M.L. McCollough (USRA/MSFC), B.A.
Harmon (NASA/MSFC), S. Dieters, W.S. Paciesas (UAH), M. Tavani
(Columbia and IFCTR, Milan), R. P. Fender (Sussex), G.G. Pooley
(Cambridge), E. Waltman (NRL), I.F. Mirabel (Saclay), R.M. Hjellming, M.
Rupen, F. Ghigo (NRAO), L.F. Rodriguez (UNAM) and K. Ebisawa
(USRA/GSFC), report: Following recent flaring activity at 2.25 and 8.3
GHz, observed by the Green Bank Interferometer, and hard X-ray activity,
observed by CGRO/BATSE, we observed the superluminal jet source
GRS1915+105 from 21:31 on 7 May to 00:44 on 8 May with the RXTE/PCA.
Four repeating outburst cycles, of period near 2000 seconds, were observed
from the source. The gross structure of the light curve can be described as a
high intensity spike, reaching a height of 3200 counts/second, followed by
lower intensity oscillations, a dip to a minimum level, and finally a gradual
recovery after which the entire cycle repeats. The hardness ratio (defined
above and below 11 keV) is inversely correlated with intensity.
BATSE monitoring of GRS 1915+105 before and during these observations
indicates a persistent hard component with intensity of 0.10-0.13
photons/cm2/second in the 20-100 keV band. Preliminary analysis of data
since mid-April indicates that the energy spectrum can be adequately fit with a
power law of photon index about -3. The day-to-day variability of the source
increases roughly in conjunction with the first GBI flare on April 25-26.
Additional RXTE observations and a coordinated IR/VLA/VLBA observation is
scheduled for 13-16 hours UT on May 15. A light curve from part of our RXTE
observations, future observing plans and additional information on galactic
superluminal sources will be available from the WWW site at
http://www.batse.msfc.nasa.gov/multiwave. Interested observers are
encouraged to visit this site and to send information on their observations to
multiwave@bbking.msfc.nasa.gov.
During the last month the following pulsed sources have been detected by the
BATSE pulsed source monitor: Her X-1, Cen X-3, 4U 1626-67, OAO 1657-415,
EXO 2030+375,GX 1+4, Vela X-1, 4U 1145-619,and GX 301-2.
The burst trigger is currently using rates from channels 2+3 (50 - 300 keV), with
thresholds of 5.5 sigma for all timescales. As of May 8 BATSE has detected
1817 gamma-ray bursts out of a total of 6120 on-board triggers in 2207 days of
operation. There have been 782 triggers due to solar flares, 42 due to SGR
events, 65 due to terrestrial gamma-ray flashes, and 1800 due to the bursting
pulsar GRO J1744-28.
The current burst catalog is now available from the BATSE Web page
(http://www.batse.msfc.nasa.gov/data/grb/catalog/). Currently available are the
basic table, which contains the locations, the peak flux and fluence table, and a
table giving trigger criteria changes. Others tables, such as V/Vmax and
duration, will be added as they become available. The tables will be kept up to
date, but the data are subject to change.