Using GRO J1655-40 to test Swift/BAT as a monitor for bright hard X-ray sources
F. Senziani, G. Novara, A. De Luca, P. A. Caraveo, T.Belloni, G. F., Bignami

TL;DR
This paper presents a validated method using Swift/BAT survey data to monitor bright hard X-ray sources, demonstrating reliable flux and spectral measurements and cross-instrument consistency with RXTE data.
Contribution
The authors developed and tested a comprehensive procedure to analyze BAT survey data for assessing flux and spectral variability of bright sources, validated through Crab and GRO J1655-40 observations.
Findings
BAT can recover flux and spectral shape across its entire FOV.
BAT flux measurements agree within 10-15% with HEXTE data.
The method achieves a sensitivity of ~20 mCrab for on-axis sources.
Abstract
While waiting for new gamma-ray burst detections, the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) on board Swift covers each day ~50% of the sky in the hard X-ray band (``Survey data''). The large field of view (FOV), high sensitivity and good angular resolution make BAT a potentially powerful all-sky hard X-ray monitor, provided that mask--related systematics can be properly accounted for. We have developed and tested a complete procedure entirely based on public Swift/BAT software tools to analyse BAT Survey data, aimed at assessing the flux and spectral variability of bright sources in the 15-150 keV energy range. Detailed tests of the capabilities of our procedure were performed focusing, in particular, on the reliability of spectral measurements over the entire BAT FOV. First, we analyzed a large set of Crab observations, spread over ~7 months. Next, we studied the case of GRO J1655-40, a strongly…
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