Search for Gamma-Ray Bursts and Gravitational Wave Electromagnetic Counterparts with High Energy X-ray Telescope of \textit{Insight}-HXMT
C. Cai, S. L. Xiong, C. K. Li, C. Z. Liu, S. N. Zhang, X. B. Li, L. M., Song, B. Li, S. Xiao, Q. B. Yi, Y. Zhu, Y. G. Zheng, W. Chen, Q. Luo, Y., Huang, X. Y. Song, H. S. Zhao, Y. Zhao, Z. Zhang, Q. C. Bu, X. L. Cao, Z., Chang, L. Chen, T. X. Chen, Y. B. Chen, Y. Chen

TL;DR
This paper presents an improved search pipeline for gamma-ray bursts using Insight-HXMT data, enhancing detection sensitivity and reducing false triggers, and applies it to find counterparts of gravitational wave events.
Contribution
The paper introduces an improved targeted coherent search method for gamma-ray bursts that effectively filters false triggers and increases detection sensitivity in Insight-HXMT data.
Findings
Recovered 40 weak GRBs missed by blind search
Increased detection sensitivity to 1.5E-08 erg/cm^2
No EM counterparts found for GW events in two years
Abstract
The High Energy X-ray telescope (HE) on-board the Hard X-ray Modulation Telescope (\textit{Insight}-HXMT) can serve as a wide Field of View (FOV) gamma-ray monitor with high time resolution (s) and large effective area (up to thousands cm). We developed a pipeline to search for Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs), using the traditional signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) method for blind search and the coherent search method for targeted search. By taking into account the location and spectrum of the burst and the detector response, the targeted coherent search is more powerful to unveil weak and sub-threshold bursts, especially those in temporal coincidence with Gravitational Wave (GW) events. Based on the original method in literature, we further improved the coherent search to filter out false triggers caused by spikes in light curves, which are commonly seen in gamma-ray instruments (e.g.…
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.
