The ECLAIRs telescope onboard the SVOM mission for gamma-ray burst studies
Stephane Schanne

TL;DR
The ECLAIRs telescope onboard SVOM aims to detect and localize gamma-ray bursts with high sensitivity, providing rapid alerts for follow-up observations and advancing understanding of distant, redshifted GRBs.
Contribution
This paper introduces the ECLAIRs instrument design and its expected performance for gamma-ray burst detection and localization onboard the SVOM mission.
Findings
ECLAIRs will detect GRBs with a localization accuracy better than 10 arcmin.
The telescope's low energy threshold enhances detection of highly redshifted GRBs.
Rapid alert transmission within tens of seconds enables timely ground-based follow-up.
Abstract
The X- and gamma-ray telescope ECLAIRs onboard the future mission for gamma-ray burst studies SVOM (Space-based multi-band astronomical Variable Objects Monitor) is foreseen to operate in orbit from 2013 on. ECLAIRs will provide fast and accurate GRB triggers to other onboard telescopes, as well as to the whole GRB community, in particular ground-based follow-up telescopes. With its very low energy threshold ECLAIRs is particularly well suited for the detection of highly redshifted GRB. The ECLAIRs X- and gamma-ray imaging camera (CXG), used for GRB detection and localization, is combined with a soft X-ray telescope (SXT) for afterglow observations and position refinement. The CXG is a 2D-coded mask imager with a 1024 cm detection plane made of 8080 CdTe pixels, sensitive from 4 to 300 keV, with imaging capabilities up to about 120 keV and a localization accuracy better than…
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