SVOM: a new mission for Gamma-Ray Burst Studies
D. Gotz, J.Paul, S. Basa, J. Wei, S. N. Zhang, J.-L. Atteia, D., Barret, B. Cordier, A. Claret, J. Deng, X. Fan, J.Y. Hu, M. Huang, P., Mandrou, S. Mereghetti, Y. Qiu, B. Wu

TL;DR
SVOM is a comprehensive space and ground-based mission designed to detect, localize, and study Gamma-Ray Bursts across multiple wavelengths, enhancing understanding of their physics, progenitors, and cosmological significance.
Contribution
The paper introduces the SVOM mission, combining multiple instruments and strategies to improve GRB detection, localization, and analysis, especially for distant and soft-spectrum bursts.
Findings
Designed to detect all known GRB types
Provides rapid and accurate GRB localizations
Optimized for observing distant, soft-spectrum GRBs
Abstract
We present the SVOM (Space-based multi-band astronomical Variable Object Monitor) mission, that is being developed in cooperation between the Chinese National Space Agency (CNSA), the Chinese Academy of Science (CAS) and the French Space Agency (CNES). Its scientific objectives include the study of the GRB phenomenon, GRB physics and progenitors, cosmology, and fundamental physics. SVOM is designed to detect all known types of Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs), to provide fast and reliable GRB positions, to measure the broadband spectral characteristics and temporal properties of the GRB prompt emission. This will be obtained in first place thanks to a set of four space flown instruments. A wide field (~2 sr) coded mask telescope (ECLAIRs), operating in the 4-250 keV energy range, will provide the triggers and localizations, while a gamma-ray non-imaging spectrometer (GRM), sensitive in the 50…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
