HERMES: Gamma Ray Burst and Gravitational Wave counterpart hunter
G. Ghirlanda, L. Nava, O. Salafia, F. Fiore, R. Campana, R., Salvaterra, A. Sanna, W. Leone, Y. Evangelista, G. Dilillo, S. Puccetti, A., Santangelo, M. Trenti, A. Guzm\'an, P. Hedderman, G. Amelino-Camelia, M., Barbera, G. Baroni, M. Bechini, P. Bellutti, G. Bertuccio

TL;DR
HERMES is a proposed satellite constellation designed to detect gamma-ray bursts, including faint, high-redshift, and short-duration events, and to identify electromagnetic counterparts to gravitational wave sources, enhancing multi-messenger astronomy.
Contribution
This paper introduces the HERMES satellite constellation concept and evaluates its capabilities for detecting GRBs and their gravitational wave counterparts, including novel configurations and detection estimates.
Findings
HERMES Pathfinder and SpIRIT can detect hundreds of GRBs annually.
Larger HERMES Constellations could detect thousands of GRBs per year.
HERMES can identify joint GRB and gravitational wave events with significant rates.
Abstract
Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) bridge relativistic astrophysics and multi-messenger astronomy. Space-based gamma/X-ray wide field detectors have proven essential to detect and localize the highly variable GRB prompt emission, which is also a counterpart of gravitational wave events. We study the capabilities to detect long and short GRBs by the High Energy Rapid Modular Ensemble of Satellites (HERMES) Pathfinder (HP) and SpIRIT, namely a swarm of six 3U CubeSats to be launched in early 2025, and a 6U CubeSat launched on December 1st 2023. We also study the capabilities of two advanced configurations of swarms of >8 satellites with improved detector performances (HERMES Constellations). The HERMES detectors, sensitive down to ~2-3 keV, will be able to detect faint/soft GRBs which comprise X-ray flashes and high redshift bursts. By combining state-of-the-art long and short GRB population models…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
