Swift publication statistics: a comparison with other major observatories
S. Savaglio (MPE, Garching), U. Grothkopf (ESO, Garching)

TL;DR
Swift has rapidly increased its publication output since 2005, surpassing many major observatories in the number of papers, with diverse science topics and citation impact comparable to other high-energy missions.
Contribution
This study provides a bibliometric comparison of Swift's publication impact with other major observatories from 2005 to 2011.
Findings
Swift published 1101 papers from 2005-2011.
Swift's annual publications increased from 24 to 287.
By 2011, Swift's publication count surpassed Subaru and Gemini.
Abstract
Swift is a satellite equipped with gamma-ray, X-ray, and optical-UV instruments aimed at discovering, localizing and collecting data from gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). Launched at the end of 2004, this small-size mission finds about a hundred GRBs per year, totaling more than 700 events as of 2012. In addition to GRBs, Swift observes other energetic events, such as AGNs, novae, and supernovae. Here we look at its success using bibliometric tools; that is the number of papers using Swift data and their impact (i.e., number of citations to those papers). We derived these for the publication years 2005 to 2011, and compared them with the same numbers for other major observatories. Swift provided data for 1101 papers in the interval 2005-2011, with 24 in the first year, to 287 in the last year. In 2011, Swift had more than double the number of publications as Subaru, it overcame Gemini by a…
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