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REM/ROSS activities @IASF-BO. Nicola Masetti IASF/CNR, Sezione di Bologna, Italy. REM , THE ROBOTIC TELESCOPE. Diameter: 60 cm Location: La Silla (Chile) first light: 25 June 2003 IR camera (J, H, K, z filters) ROSS optical camera (V, R, I filters; 3700-9000 Å slitless spectroscopy)
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REM/ROSS activities@IASF-BO Nicola Masetti IASF/CNR, Sezione di Bologna, Italy
REM, THE ROBOTIC TELESCOPE • Diameter: 60 cm • Location: La Silla (Chile) • first light: 25 June 2003 • IR camera (J, H, K, z filters) • ROSS optical camera (V, R, I filters; 3700-9000 Å slitless spectroscopy) • fast repointing (< 10 s for 90° slew) • Limiting mags. (1 s, 3σ): V 17.5; R 17.5; I 16.5; J 15; H 14; K 13.5
PEOPLE INVOLVED IN ROSS • CORE GROUP: • Eliana Palazzi (PS; IASF-BO) • Gino Tosti (PI; UniPG) • Nicola Masetti (IASF-BO) • Alessandro Monfardini (CARSO) • Luciano Nicastro (IASF-PA) • Elena Pian (INAF-OATs) • Carlo Bagaglia (UniPG) • Carlo Campeggi (UniPG) • Carlo Ferrigno (UniPA) • Giorgio Sciuto (UniPG) • SCIENCE TEAM: • Lorenzo Amati, Filippo Frontera, Mauro Orlandini (IASF-BO) • Marco Tavani (IASF-RM) • John Danziger (INAF-OATs)
REM SCIENCE DRIVERS Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) are powerful and fast-decaying flashes of high-energy emission. While the dataset of multiwavelength observations of their emission as observed from hours to days (the “afterglow”) after the GRB proper is now growing larger, the knowledge about their early behaviour at optical/infrared energies is lacking. This information, due to the unpredictability of GRB location in the sky, can be achieved only by means of fast slewing (robotic) small telescopes. Early optical/infrared detections will also serve to trigger fast GRB followup at larger telescopes. Besides, spectral coverage of the whole optical/infrared band will allow characterizing the emission mechanisms at work in the early GRB phases and to pinpoint the presence of high-z bursts (or the lack thereof).
CAN REM/ROSS DO THIS? Yes. GRB990123
HOW ROSS CAN SEE DLA-GRBs z = 3.37 mR= 10 texp = 1 sec GRB030323 with VLT Vreeswijk et al. (2003)
WHAT IS ROSS FOR? • Primary science (GRBs): • fast detection of the GRB optical transient (OT); • monitoring the OT overall spectral shape; • finding the GRB redshift if 2.0 < z < 8.9 • Secondary science: • monitoring of AGNs; • detection of transient X-ray binaries; • monitoring of persistent X-ray binaries; • monitoring of flare stars.
INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT • Other robotic (or robotized) telescopes: • Tarot (F) • BOOTES (E) MoU for creation of REM-Nord • BART (CZ) • ROTSE-III (USA) • RAPTOR (USA) • SuperLOTIS (USA) • KAIT (USA) • NEAT (USA) • REM is however the only one capable to observe simultaneously from 3700 to 22500 Å within seconds after the GRB trigger. FUNDING & GRANTS • ASI grant 2001 • COFIN 2002 (grant for 2003-2004) • Descartes prize 2002 (a fraction of)
GRB COLLABORATIONS • GRACE (GRB Afterglow Collaboration at ESO): • Denmark Telescopes of Paranal • Germany and La Silla plus • Italy (IASF + OATs) national telescopes • Netherlands (barring TNG for • Spain Italians) • UK (+ USA) • CIBO (Consorzio Italiano Burst Ottici) • INAF – Brera (Merate) Asiago, Loiano, REM, • INAF – Roma (Monteporzio) Campo Imperatore, • IASF – CNR (Bologna) TNG • INAF - Trieste
HOW CAN WE DO THIS BETTER? • A good idea would be having the Italian National Telescope to continue the GRB program… • No TNG-AOT9 time allocated for GRB followup because: • too much time was requested; • too many instruments were requested. • But: • Swift will fly in June 2004. It is fundamental to have TNG ready for the opportunities this satellite will offer; • TNG is one of the (very) few telescopes which can afford near-infrared spectropolarimetry; • REM can boost TNG activities. • In 4 years (2000 – 2003), we produced 16% of TNG-based refereed papers with <3% of TNG time.
AMATEUR ACTIVITIES… Cen A Eagle Dumbbell Ring NGC 6652 Trifid