Gamma Ray Burst studies with THESEUS
G. Ghirlanda, R. Salvaterra, M. Toffano, S. Ronchini, C. Guidorzi, G., Oganesyan, S. Ascenzi, M.G. Bernardini, A. E. Camisasca, S. Mereghetti, L., Nava, M.E. Ravasio, M. Branchesi, A. Castro-Tirado, L. Amati, A. Blain, E., Bozzo, P. O'Brien, D. G\"otz, E. Le Floch, J. P. Osborne

TL;DR
THESEUS will significantly advance gamma-ray burst research by enabling detailed spectral analysis across a broad energy range, improving understanding of their emission mechanisms, progenitors, and use as cosmological tools.
Contribution
This paper introduces the THESEUS mission's capabilities to characterize GRB prompt emission from 0.3 keV to 10 MeV with unprecedented detail, expanding current observational limits.
Findings
Full spectral characterization of GRBs from 0.3 keV to 10 MeV.
Enhanced understanding of prompt emission mechanisms and progenitor properties.
Potential to improve GRBs as cosmological tools.
Abstract
Gamma-ray Bursts (GRBs) are the most powerful transients in the Universe, over-shining for a few seconds all other -ray sky sources. Their emission is produced within narrowly collimated relativistic jets launched after the core-collapse of massive stars or the merger of compact binaries. THESEUS will open a new window for the use of GRBs as cosmological tools by securing a statistically significant sample of high- GRBs, as well as by providing a large number of GRBs at low-intermediate redshifts extending the current samples to low luminosities. The wide energy band and unprecedented sensitivity of the Soft X-ray Imager (SXI) and X-Gamma rays Imaging Spectrometer (XGIS) instruments provide us a new route to unveil the nature of the prompt emission. For the first time, a full characterisation of the prompt emission spectrum from 0.3 keV to 10 MeV with unprecedented large…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
