From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
GRB 830801
Event type Gamma-ray burst  Edit this on Wikidata
Constellation Leo  Edit this on Wikidata
Other designationsGRB 830801B, GRB 830801

GRB 830801 is a gamma-ray burst that occurred on 1983 August 1. It is one of the brightest GRB events known.

It had a peak flux of 3.0 photons·cm−2·s−1·keV−1 averaged from 50 to 300 k eV, a dead time correction by a factor of 1.9, and a smooth light curve for the peak 256 ms time interval. The peak flux P256 was around 1400 photons·s−1·cm−2. [1]

This was also the first detection of the influence of a gamma burst on the upper atmosphere.

Sources

References

  1. ^ Schaefer, Bradley E.; Deng, Ming; Band, David L. (2001). "Redshifts and Luminosities for 112 Gamma-Ray Bursts". The Astrophysical Journal. 563 (2): L123–L127. arXiv: astro-ph/0101461. Bibcode: 2001ApJ...563L.123S. doi: 10.1086/338651. S2CID  17381345.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
GRB 830801
Event type Gamma-ray burst  Edit this on Wikidata
Constellation Leo  Edit this on Wikidata
Other designationsGRB 830801B, GRB 830801

GRB 830801 is a gamma-ray burst that occurred on 1983 August 1. It is one of the brightest GRB events known.

It had a peak flux of 3.0 photons·cm−2·s−1·keV−1 averaged from 50 to 300 k eV, a dead time correction by a factor of 1.9, and a smooth light curve for the peak 256 ms time interval. The peak flux P256 was around 1400 photons·s−1·cm−2. [1]

This was also the first detection of the influence of a gamma burst on the upper atmosphere.

Sources

References

  1. ^ Schaefer, Bradley E.; Deng, Ming; Band, David L. (2001). "Redshifts and Luminosities for 112 Gamma-Ray Bursts". The Astrophysical Journal. 563 (2): L123–L127. arXiv: astro-ph/0101461. Bibcode: 2001ApJ...563L.123S. doi: 10.1086/338651. S2CID  17381345.

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