GRB follow-up and science with THESEUS/IRT
Abstract
The aim of the space mission concept ~is to continue to collect and study the GRB events like . It will allow us to study the early Universe. Moreover, it will offer us to study with unprecedented sensitivity GRB emission and to measure the redshift for the bursts with z>5. In this work, we investigate the advantages of a optical and near-infrared telescope mounted on the same satellite that is triggered by the GRB like /IRT. Afterwards, we investigate the possible future developments in the GRB science, first for the prompt phase and the for afterglow phase. We find that more than half of the sources detected by , and will never be visible from a a ground-based telescope. Moreover, only 50\% of all observable sources are visible within one hour, i.e. <30\% of all ~transient sources. A higher number of observable sources can only be achieved with a network of telescopes. ~will permit to detect the NIR prompt phase of the longest GRBs, increasing the number of events studied from gamma-rays to the near-infrared from a handful of events studied up to now to 10 GRBs per year.
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