GCN Circular 1084
Subject
Dramatic Increase in the Rate of X-ray Bursts Reported by HETE
Date
2001-07-30T21:06:05Z (23 years ago)
From
George Ricker at MIT <grr@space.mit.edu>
Dramatic Increase in the Rate of X-ray Bursts Reported by HETE
G. Ricker (MIT), on behalf of the HETE Team, reports:
Over the past few weeks, the number of X-ray bursts (XRBs) reported
by HETE has been gradually increasing, reaching ~10 per day during
the past 2-3 days. This seeming storm of XRBs is being produced by an
ensemble of ~10 distinct XRB sources, which are optimally placed in
the HETE field-of-view (FOV) for detectability.
This dramatic overall increase is due to two factors: 1) Improvements
in the on-board detection algorithm, resulting from lowered trigger
thresholds and increased numbers of trigger time scales being
activated; 2) Sco X-1 has moved out of the HETE instruments' FOV,
greatly reducing the overall background, thus improving the
instruments' burst detection efficiency.
(NB: Despite the flurry of XRBs, soft gamma repeaters [SGR] and
gamma-ray bursts [GRB] positions are now being, and will continue to
be, reported for events which trigger the high energy bands of the
FREGATE instrument directly.)
Many of the faint XRB detections are near threshold, and thus their
onboard localization is unreliable. In order not to saturate rapid
response telescopes and observing programs which primarily target
SGRs and GRBs, these XRB events are being reported to the GCN with no
positions. (In fact, reliable positions are subsequently established
by the WXM ground software for a large fraction of these XRB events.)
A refined reporting algorithm, which will more clearly distinguish
fainter, poorly-localized XRBs from brighter, well-localized XRBs
will be implemented in the near future. In the meantime, the XRB
"alert only" reports will continue. Beginning in late August, when
the Galactic Bulge Region moves out of HETE's FOV, we anticipate a
precipitous drop in the reported XRB rate.