Prompt emission from GRB 150915A in the GeV energy range detected at ground by the New-Tupi detector: A review

Abstract

Since 2014, a new detector (New-Tupi) consisting of four plastic scintillators (150 × 75 × 5 cm3) placed in pairs and located in Niteroi, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, has been used for the search of transient solar events and photomuons from gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). On September 15, 2015, at 21:18:24 UT, the Swift Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) triggered and located GRB 150915A (trigger 655721). The GRB light curve shows a weak complex structure of long duration T90=164.7 49.7 s, and a fluence in the 15-150 keV band of 8.0 1.8 × 10-7erg/cm2. GRB 150915A was fortuitously located in the field of view of the New-Tupi detector, and a search for prompt emission in the GeV energy range is presented here. The analysis was made using the "scaler" or "single-particle" technique. The New-Tupi detector registered a counting rate excess peak of duration T90=(6.1 0.6) s with a signal significance (4.4 0.5)σ, (and not 6.9σ as reported in the previous version). The signal is within the T90 duration of the Swift BAT GRB, with an estimated "excess" fluence of FS(E>0.1 GeV)=1.3 0.3 × 10-6 erg/cm2. This value can be considered the lower limit of the gamma ray fluence in the GeV energy region. However, the Poisson probability of the event to be a background fluctuation is 5.0 × 10-6 and it appears in the counting rate of the New-Tupi detector with an annual rate 76. In addition, the signal has a significance of only 2σ in the time profiles with a bin above 2 seconds. Thus we conclude that the event has a high probability to be background fluctuation.

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