We present a systematic spectral analysis of 350 bright GRBs observed with BATSE, with high spectral and temporal resolution. Our sample was selected from the complete set of 2704 BATSE GRBs, and included 17 short GRBs. To obtain well-constrained spectral parameters, four different photon models were fitted and the spectral parameters that best represent each spectrum were statistically determined. A thorough analysis was performed on 350 time-integrated and 8459 time-resolved burst spectra. Using the results, we compared time-integrated and time-resolved spectral parameters, and also studied correlations among the parameters and their evolution within each burst. The resulting catalog is the most comprehensive study of spectral properties of GRB prompt emission to date, and provides constraints with exceptional statistics on particle acceleration and emission mechanisms in GRBs.
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: dN/dE ∝ E α ). We have collected time-resolved spectral fit parameters for over 100 bright bursts observed by the Burst And Transient Source Experiment on board the 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.
Following its launch in 2008 June, the Fermi Gamma-ray Space
Telescope (Fermi) began a sky survey in August.
The Large Area Telescope (LAT) on Fermi in three months
produced a deeper and better resolved map of the γ-ray sky than any previous
space mission. We present here initial results for energies above 100 MeV for
the 205 most significant (statistical significance greater than ∼10σ) γ-ray
sources in these data. These are the best characterized and best localized
point-like (i.e., spatially unresolved) γ-ray sources in the early mission
data.
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