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GCN Circular 40249

Subject
GRB 250424A: EIRSAT-1 GMOD Detection
Date
2025-04-25T20:36:05Z (a day ago)
From
Caimin McKenna at University College Dublin <caimin.mckenna@ucdconnect.ie>
Via
Web form

C. McKenna, P. McDermott, D. Murphy, C. de Barra, A. Ulyanov, G. Finneran, G. Corcoran, L. Cotter, A. Empey, J. Fisher, F. Gibson Kiely, J. Thompson, D. McKeown, A. Martin-Carrillo, L. Hanlon, S. McBreen, on behalf of the EIRSAT-1 team:

EIRSAT-1 reports the detection of the long gamma-ray burst GRB 250424A by the Gamma-ray Module (GMOD) instrument, which was also detected by Swift-BAT (GCN 40224), Calet/CGBM (Trigger No. 1429512582), AstroSat CZTI (GCN 40231), and Konus-Wind (GCN 40243). The GMOD detection was made starting at 2025-04-24 06:52:12.6 UTC.

The GMOD light curve for GRB 250424A, with 1.2s binning, shows a long, smooth, single pulse, consistent with other observations.

The spacecraft location at time of detection was 23.407 S, 123.088 W and an altitude of 402.9 km.

The light curve for this event as measured by GMOD can be found here: https://grb.eirsat1.ie/250424A/250424A_LC_onboard_preliminary.png

EIRSAT-1 is Ireland’s first satellite (Doyle et al. Proceedings of the 4th SSEA, 2022). It is a 2U CubeSat and carries onboard a number of experiments including the Gamma-Ray Module (GMOD), a novel, compact, gamma-ray detector (Murphy et al, Experimental Astronomy, 53, 961–990, 2022). GMOD consists of a 25 mm × 25 mm × 40 mm Cerium Bromide scintillator coupled to SiPMs and is designed to detect gamma-ray bursts in the ~ 60 keV - 1.5 MeV range. EIRSAT-1 was developed in University College Dublin with support from ESA’s Fly Your Satellite! programme and was launched on 1st December 2023.

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