First burst detected by the ECLAIRs telescope

The coded mask, recently integrated on the ECLAIRs telescope, makes it possible to localise X-ray sources in the instrument’s field of view. This crucial feature for the detection of gamma-ray bursts was tested from 17 to 20 May at CNES by teams from CEA, IRAP and CNES. On this occasion, the ECLAIRs computer processed the camera data in real time for the first time and detected an X-ray source placed in front of the instrument. The animation below, built from the recorded data, illustrates the detection of the source whose intensity is controlled to mimic the behaviour of a gamma-ray burst that suddenly appears. The image on the left shows the image recorded by the detector and the image on the right the decoded image. When the source is sufficiently bright, the coded mask pattern is projected onto the detection plane and the decoding performed by the computer shows the presence of the source in the centre of the field of view.

Left: detector image. Right: decoded image

The computer software searches for and locates bright spots in the decoded images and sends alerts if one is detected. Once in orbit, the alert provided by ECLAIRs will be the starting point for an observation sequence to study the source in several wavelengths with the SVOM mission’s observation facilities, in space or on the ground, or with other instruments of the international scientific community.

IRAP Contact

  • Jean-Luc Atteia, Jean-Luc.Atteia@irap.omp.eu

More news

DELIVERY OF THE FLIGHT MODEL OF THE LEES INSTRUMENT FOR THE COMET INTERCEPTOR MISSION

The flight model (FM) of the Low-Energy Electron Spectrometer (LEES) instrument for which IRAP is responsible was delivered on May, 12 2026 to the Space Research Center (CBK) of the […]

Back to the Future: viewing Uranus through an ENA camera

The Voyager 2 flyby of Uranus in 1986 portrayed a magnetospheric system now viewed as the reference for an extreme, asymmetric magnetosphere in our solar system. Flying a typical ENA […]

How laboratory astrophysics can help us understanding the formation of stardust. The case of silicon carbide.

Silicon carbide is a major component of stellar dust. Experimental simulations using the Stardust machine (ICCM-Madrid) have shown that silicon carbide nanograins can form from carbon and silicon atoms, and […]

Search