GRB Probes of the Early Universe with EXIST
Jonathan E. Grindlay

TL;DR
The paper discusses the proposed EXIST mission's capability to detect high-redshift gamma-ray bursts, enabling direct study of the early universe, first stars, and cosmic reionization through advanced imaging and spectroscopy.
Contribution
It introduces the design and scientific goals of the EXIST mission, emphasizing its enhanced sensitivity and spectral coverage for probing the early universe with GRBs.
Findings
EXIST could detect over 100 GRBs at z >= 8.
Spectroscopy will directly probe the Epoch of Reionization.
The mission will constrain formation of first stars and galaxies.
Abstract
With the Swift detection of GRB090423 at z = 8.2, it was confirmed that GRBs are now detectable at (significantly) larger redshifts than AGN, and so can indeed be used as probes of the Early Universe. The proposed Energetic X-ray Imaging Survey Telescope (EXIST) mission has been designed to detect and promptly measure redshifts and both soft X-ray (0.1 - 10 keV) and simultaneous nUV-nIR (0.3 - 2.3microns) imaging and spectra for GRBs out to redshifts z ~18, which encompasses (or even exceeds) current estimates for Pop III stars that are expected to be massive and possibly GRB sources. Scaling from Swift for the ~10X greater sensitivity of EXIST, more than 100 GRBs at z >=8 may be detected and would provide direct constraints on the formation and evolution of the first stars and galaxies. For GRBs at redshifts z >= 8, with Lyman breaks at greater than 1.12microns, spectra at resolution R…
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