POLAR: Final Calibration and In-Flight Performance of a Dedicated GRB Polarimeter
M. Kole, T.W. Bao, T. Batsch, T. Bernasconi, F. Cadoux, J.Y. Chai,, Y.W. Dong, N. Gauvin, W. Hajdas, J.J. He, M.N. Kong, S.W. Kong, C., Lechanoine-Leluc, L. Li, Z.H. Li, J.T. Liu, X. Liu, R. Marcinkowski, S. Orsi,, M. Pohl, N. Produit, D. Rapin, A. Rutczynska, D. Rybka, H.L. Shi

TL;DR
POLAR is a dedicated gamma-ray burst polarimeter launched in 2016, designed to measure polarization with high precision in the 50-500 keV range, providing valuable data on astrophysical emission processes.
Contribution
This paper presents the final calibration, in-orbit performance, and detailed design of POLAR, a novel instrument for gamma-ray burst polarization measurements in space.
Findings
Successful in-orbit operation since 2016
High-precision polarization measurements achieved
Calibrated and qualified through extensive ground tests
Abstract
Gamma-ray polarimetry is a new powerful tool to study the processes responsible for the emission from astrophysical sources and the environments in which this emission takes place. Few successful polarimetric measurements have however been performed thus far in the gamma-ray energy band due to the difficulties involved. POLAR is a dedicated polarimeter designed to perform high precision measurements of the polarization of the emission from gamma-ray burst in the 50-500 keV energy range. This new polarimeter is expected to detect approximately 50 gamma-ray bursts per year while performing high precision polarization measurements on approximately 10 bursts per year. The instrument was launched into lower earth orbit as part of the second Chinese space lab, the Tiangong-2, on September 15th 2016 and has been taking data successfully since being switched on one week after. The instrument…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astro and Planetary Science
