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Astrophysics and Astronomy

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Maximum Likelihood Estimates

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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Comptel Measurements Of The Gamma-Ray Burst Grb 930131, James M. Ryan, K Bennett, W Collmar, A Connors, Gerald J. Fishman, J Greiner, L O. Hanlon, W Hermsen, R M. Kippen, C Kouveliotou, L Kuiper, G G. Lichti, John R. Macri, J. Mattox, Mark L. Mcconnell, B Mcnamara, C Meegan, V. Schonfelder, R Vandijk, M Varendorff, W Webber, C Winkler Feb 1994

Comptel Measurements Of The Gamma-Ray Burst Grb 930131, James M. Ryan, K Bennett, W Collmar, A Connors, Gerald J. Fishman, J Greiner, L O. Hanlon, W Hermsen, R M. Kippen, C Kouveliotou, L Kuiper, G G. Lichti, John R. Macri, J. Mattox, Mark L. Mcconnell, B Mcnamara, C Meegan, V. Schonfelder, R Vandijk, M Varendorff, W Webber, C Winkler

Physics & Astronomy

On 1993 January 31 at 1857:12 Universal Time (UT), the Imaging Compton Telescope COMPTEL onboard the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (CGRO) detected the cosmic gamma-ray burst GRB 930131. COMPTEL's MeV imaging capability was employed to locate the source to better than 2 deg (1 sigma error radius) within 7 hr of the event, initiating a world-wide search for an optical and radio counterpart. The maximum likelihood position of the burst from the COMPTEL data is alpha2000 = 12h 18m, delta2000 = -9 deg 42 min, consistent with independent CGRO-Burst and Transient Source Experiment (CGRO-BATSE) and Energetic Gamma Ray …


Comptel Detections Of The Quasars 3c 273 And 3c 279, W Hermsen, H Aarts, K Bennett, H Bloemen, H Deboer, W Collmar, A Connors, R Diehl, R Vandijk, J W. Den Herder, L Kuiper, G G. Lichti, J Lockwood, John R. Macri, Mark L. Mcconnell, D Morris, James M. Ryan, V. Schonfelder, G. Simpson, H Steinle, A W. Strong, B Swanenburg, C De Vries, W Webber, O R. Williams, C Winkler Jan 1993

Comptel Detections Of The Quasars 3c 273 And 3c 279, W Hermsen, H Aarts, K Bennett, H Bloemen, H Deboer, W Collmar, A Connors, R Diehl, R Vandijk, J W. Den Herder, L Kuiper, G G. Lichti, J Lockwood, John R. Macri, Mark L. Mcconnell, D Morris, James M. Ryan, V. Schonfelder, G. Simpson, H Steinle, A W. Strong, B Swanenburg, C De Vries, W Webber, O R. Williams, C Winkler

Physics & Astronomy

The COMPTEL experiment aboard the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory, sensitive in the energy range from about 0.7 to 30 MeV, observed the high-latitude region containing 3C 273 and 3C 279 during a 2-week period in June, 1991. A search for sources using a maximum likelihood analysis revealed two statistically significant point-like excesses, the positions of which are consistent with those of 3C 273 and 3C 279. These sources are the first QSOs detected at MeV energies. In the COMPTEL energy domain their spectra appear to be greatly different. A comparison with earlier and simultaneous measurements in neighboring energy ranges indicates …


Comptel Observations Of Gamma-Ray Bursts - Imaging And Localization, A Connors, H Aarts, K Bennett, H Bloemen, H Deboer, M Busetta, W Collmar, R Diehl, R Van Dijk, L O. Hanlon, J W. Den Herder, W Hermsen, R M. Kippen, L Kuiper, A. Klumper, G G. Lichti, J Lockwood, John R. Macri, Mark L. Mcconnell, D Morris, R Much, James M. Ryan, V. Schonfelder, G. Simpson, J G. Stacy, H Steinle, A W. Strong, B Swanenburg, B G. Taylor, M Varendorff, C De Vries, W Webber, O R. Williams, C Winkler Jan 1993

Comptel Observations Of Gamma-Ray Bursts - Imaging And Localization, A Connors, H Aarts, K Bennett, H Bloemen, H Deboer, M Busetta, W Collmar, R Diehl, R Van Dijk, L O. Hanlon, J W. Den Herder, W Hermsen, R M. Kippen, L Kuiper, A. Klumper, G G. Lichti, J Lockwood, John R. Macri, Mark L. Mcconnell, D Morris, R Much, James M. Ryan, V. Schonfelder, G. Simpson, J G. Stacy, H Steinle, A W. Strong, B Swanenburg, B G. Taylor, M Varendorff, C De Vries, W Webber, O R. Williams, C Winkler

Space Science Center

The COMPTEL experiment on GRO images 0.7-30 MeV celestial gamma-radiation that falls within its 1 steradian field of view. During the first eleven months of orbit, preliminary lozalizations from BATSE triggers indicated that about 1 in 6 cosmic events could have fallen within COMPTEL's field of view. WE present COMPTEL positions for four of the brighter of these gamma-ray bursts.