BATSE Occultation Data for Cygnus X-1

BATSE Occultation Data for Cygnus X-1
(Credit: A. Harmon (NASA/MSFC)

Click here for jpg version

In addition to its capabilities for detection of gamma-ray bursts and high-energy periodic phenomena, BATSE monitors the sky continuously in the energy region above 20 keV via the "Earth-occultation" technique. Many transients, with turn-on time scales from a day to a few weeks, have been discovered and major flares from known objects have been recorded using this method. This has in turn led to numerous "target-of-opportunity" studies of transient objects using the CGRO pointed instruments and other observatories. The Earth-occultation technique for flux determination is demonstrated in this figure which shows occultation "steps" due to the passage of Cygnus X-1 through the Earth's disk as seen by the satellite. The magnitude of the intensity decrease in the individual detector channels allows the source flux to be determined. To monitor weaker sources the sensitivity of the method is enhanced by combining data from multiple orbits. About 60 hard-X-ray sources are regularly monitored in this manner. -Peter Leonard



(Enter the object name)
Additions or Comments: Have we left anything out? Is there something you would like to have added to this page (a link to your own group's research page, for example...)?

IMAGES | By Mission | Stars | Cataclysmic Variables | X-ray Binaries | Pulsars | Supernova Remnants & Planetary Nebulae | Galaxies | Active Galactic Nuclei | Clusters and Groups of Galaxies | X-ray/gamma-ray Background & Deep Fields | Solar System Objects | Gamma Ray Bursts


HEASARC Home | Observatories | Archive | Calibration | Software | Tools | Students/Teachers/Public

Last modified: Thursday, 26-Jun-2003 13:48:45 EDT

HEASARC Staff Scientist Position - Applications are now being accepted for a Staff Scientist with significant experience and interest in the technical aspects of astrophysics research, to work in the High Energy Astrophysics Science Archive Research Center (HEASARC) at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) in Greenbelt, MD. Refer to the AAS Job register for full details.