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      Observations of Near-Earth Optical Transients with the Lomonosov Space Observatory

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          Abstract

          The results of observations with the MASTER-SHOK robotic wide-field optical cameras onboard the Lomonosov Space Observatory carried out in 2016 are presented. In all, the automated transient detection system transmitted 22 181 images of moving objects with signal-to-noise ratios greater than 5 to the Earth. Approximately 84% of these images are identified with well-known artificial Earth satellites (including repeated images of the same satellite) and fragments of such satellites (space debris), according to databases of known satellites. The remaining 16% of the images are relate to uncatalogued objects. This first experience in optical space-based monitoring of near-Earth space demonstrates the high efficiency and great potential of using large-aperture cameras in space, based on the software and technology of the MASTER robotic optical complexes (the Mobile Astronomical System of TElescope-Robots (MASTER) global network of robotic telescopes of Lomonosov Moscow State University).

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          Significant and variable linear polarization during the prompt optical flash of GRB 160625B

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            Observation of contemporaneous optical radiation from a gamma-ray burst

            The origin of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) has been enigmatic since their discovery. The situation improved dramatically in 1997, when the rapid availability of precise coordinates for the bursts allowed the detection of faint optical and radio afterglows - optical spectra thus obtained have demonstrated conclusively that the bursts occur at cosmological distances. But, despite efforts by several groups, optical detection has not hitherto been achieved during the brief duration of a burst. Here we report the detection of bright optical emission from GRB990123 while the burst was still in progress. Our observations begin 22 seconds after the onset of the burst and show an increase in brightness by a factor of 14 during the first 25 seconds; the brightness then declines by a factor of 100, at which point (700 seconds after the burst onset) it falls below our detection threshold. The redshift of this burst, approximately 1.6, implies a peak optical luminosity of 5 times 10^{49} erg per second. Optical emission from gamma-ray bursts has been generally thought to take place at the shock fronts generated by interaction of the primary energy source with the surrounding medium, where the gamma-rays might also be produced. The lack of a significant change in the gamma-ray light curve when the optical emission develops suggests that the gamma-rays are not produced at the shock front, but closer to the site of the original explosion.
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              SHOK—The First Russian Wide-Field Optical Camera in Space

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                09 July 2018
                Article
                10.1134/S1063772918070016
                1807.03037
                1d02d8bf-d149-4043-9a6d-77d2faec6f0f

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                ISSN 1063-7729, Astronomy Reports, 2018, Vol. 62, No. 7, pp. 426-435. c Pleiades Publishing, Ltd., 2018
                10 pages, 5 figures, published in Astronomy Reports
                astro-ph.IM astro-ph.EP

                Planetary astrophysics,Instrumentation & Methods for astrophysics
                Planetary astrophysics, Instrumentation & Methods for astrophysics

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