Seminar by Luciano Burderi (Department of Physics, University of Cagliari, Monserrato, Italy).
Thursday 10th of March, 14:15 p.m.
Abstract: ALBATROS (Astonishingly Long Baseline Array Transients Reconnaissance Observatory in Space) is an ambitious astrophysical mission concept that uses a fleet of three small satellites to create an high-energy all-sky monitor with excellent localisation capabilities. The proposed orbits for the spacecrafts are three independent Earth-trailing heliocentric orbits, that will form a nearly equilateral triangular formation with 2.5 106 km arm length: the so-called cart-wheel formation. Each satellite is equipped with two opposite facing ∼ 500 cm2 effective area detectors each consisting of a segmented array of crystal scintillators (GAGG) with a half-sky Field of View, keV-MeV energy band, and temporal resolution better than one microsecond. Thanks to the million km baselines, temporal triangulation techniques allow unprecedented location accuracies, few arc-second/few arc-minutes, for bright/faint transients in a wide energy band, few keV-few MeV crucial for hunting the elusive electromagnetic counterparts of Gravitational Waves, that will play a paramount role in the future of Multi-messenger Astronomy. (Omissis).
Google Meet Link: https://meet.google.com/ots-rija-hyc