Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS April Meeting 2022
Volume 67, Number 6
Saturday–Tuesday, April 9–12, 2022; New York
Session L14: Multimessenger Detection Strategies
3:45 PM–5:09 PM,
Sunday, April 10, 2022
Room: Soho
Sponsoring
Unit:
DNP
Chair: Peter Steinberg, Brookhaven National Laboratory
Abstract: L14.00007 : Observing neutron star mergers and the shock breakout of supernovae with SIBEX
4:57 PM–5:09 PM
Presenter:
Pete Roming
(Southwest Research Institute)
Authors:
Pete Roming
(Southwest Research Institute)
Chris Fryer
(Los Alamos Natl Lab)
Eleonora Troja
(University of Rome - Tor Vergata)
Edward A Baron
(Univ of Oklahoma)
Peter Brown
(Texas A&M University)
Stephen B Cenko
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center)
Eve Chase
(Los Alamos National Lab)
Emmanouil Chatzopoulos
(Louisiana State University)
Alessandra Corsi
(Texas Tech Univ)
Michael W Davis
(Southwest Research Institute)
Simone Dichiara
(Penn State University)
Cynthia Froning
(University of Texas, Austin)
Massimiliano Galeazzi
(University of Miami)
Kip Kuntz
(Johns Hopkins University)
Thomas J Maccarone
(Texas Tech Univ)
Philippa Molyneux
(Southwest Research Institute)
Takashi Okajima
(NASA GSFC)
David Pooley
(Trinity University)
F S Porter
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center)
Stefano Valenti
(University of California, Davis)
Todd Veach
(Southwest Research Institute)
Ryan Wollaeger
(Los Alamos National Lab)
Patrick Young
(Arizona State University)
The Shock Interaction and Breakout EXplorer (SIBEX) is a proposed MIDEX mission designed to obtain the earliest supernovae and nutetron star merger observations. SIBEX accomplishes this by monitoring large areas of the sky to detect the earliest supernova and neutron star merger photons by using its very wide field-of-view soft X-ray telescopes (XRF) to localize outbursts. Immediately after a localization is provided by XRF, a rapidly slewing spacecraft autonomously positions a co-located narrow-field UV telescope (SUSI) on the provided position. A refined position is provided by SUSI from which the spacecraft repositions SUSI in order to place its spectroscopic slit on the source in order to probe the outburst environment. No other past, present, or planned observatories have the combined SIBEX X-ray and UV capabilities for exploring ~50 shock breakouts of supernovae and ~25 neutron star mergers in a three year mission.
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