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Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Mission

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Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Mission
Swift
The Swift Spacecraft (credit: NASA)
Organization NASA
Wavelength regime gamma-ray/X-ray/UV/optical
Orbit Height 600 km
Orbit period ~90 min
Launch date 20 November 2004
Orbit re-entry date no sooner than 2020
Mass 1500 kg
Webpage http://swift.gsfc.nasa.gov/
Physical Characteristics
Telescope Style coded mask (BAT), Wolter I (XRT), Ritchey-Chretien (UVOT)
Diameter 30 cm (UVOT)
Collecting Area 5200 cm2 (BAT)
Effective Focal Length 381 cm (UVOT)
Instruments
BAT Burst Alert (gamma-ray) Telescope
XRT X-Ray Telescope
UVOT UltraViolet/Optical telescope
The Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Mission consists of an unmanned spacecraft called Swift, which was launched into orbit on November 20, 2004, at 17:16:00 UTC (12:16 PM, EST) by a Delta 2 7320-10C expendable launch vehicle. Swift is managed by the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center.

Overview

Swift is a multi-wavelength space-based observatory dedicated to the study of gamma-ray burst (GRB) science. Its three instruments work together to observe GRBs and their afterglows in the gamma-ray, X-ray, ultraviolet, and optical wavebands. This mission is part of NASA's "Medium Explorer Program" (MIDEX), and the satellite was developed by an international consortium from the United States, United Kingdom, and Italy.

During its nominal mission of two years about 200 GRBs should be observed, and as with many other NASA missions, once the two years are concluded successfully the mission will probably be extended. The Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) covers a large fraction of the sky (over one steradian fully coded, three steradians partially coded). It locates the position of each event with an accuracy of 1 to 4 arc-minutes within 15 seconds. This crude position is immediately relayed to the ground; latency is measured in seconds. Some wide-field, rapid-slew ground telescopes can catch the GRB with this much position error. Interpolation between Swift's solution, and the solutions of other spacecraft in the Interplanetary Network, may refine the position solution enough to observe with conventional telescopes.

Swift is then able to reorient itself automatically (autonomously slew) in about 20 to 75 seconds to point the fine-resolution instruments at the burst location. The rapid slew time demonstrated by this ability is the reason for the mission's name "Swift." In order to achieve this fast slew rate, the observatory is equipped with momentum wheels as part of its reaction control system. Relative to the spacecraft, these wheels are more massive than on any past mission, and are therefore more effective at reorienting the spacecraft when they spin. The rest of the spacecraft has had its mass concentrated, to reduce loads on the wheels.

If the other instruments detect the burst, its fine position is reported to the ground within one orbit, and typically much less. The new solution is fine enough to observe from most ground and space observatories without a rastering search.

In the time between GRB events, the BAT instrument conducts an all-sky survey in the hard X-ray region. After its successful completion, the survey is anticipated to yield new black hole candidates in the sky.

The Swift Mission Operation Center (MOC), where commanding of the satellite is performed, is located in State College, Pennsylvania and operated by the Pennsylvania State University and industry subcontractors. The Swift main ground station is located in Malindi on the coast of Eastern Kenya, Africa and is operated by the Italian Space Agency. The Swift Science Data Center (SDC) and archive are located at the Goddard Space Flight Center. The UK Swift Science Data Centre is located at the [University of Leicester].

Instruments

There are three observing instruments on board:

Science goals

This mission has multiple science goals:

Mission progress

UVOT "first light" picture (Credit: NASA/GFSC)
Enlarge
UVOT "first light" picture (Credit: NASA/GFSC)

Important events and results

References

External links

 


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