E
E. E. Fenimore
Researcher at Los Alamos National Laboratory
Publications - 360
Citations - 14390
E. E. Fenimore is an academic researcher from Los Alamos National Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gamma-ray burst & Neutron star. The author has an hindex of 51, co-authored 358 publications receiving 13692 citations. Previous affiliations of E. E. Fenimore include University of Maryland, Baltimore County.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Mission
Neil Gehrels,G. Chincarini,G. Chincarini,Paolo Giommi,Keith O. Mason,John A. Nousek,Alan A. Wells,Nicholas E. White,S. D. Barthelmy,David N. Burrows,L. R. Cominsky,Kevin Hurley,F. E. Marshall,Peter Mészáros,Peter W. A. Roming,Lorella Angelini,Lorella Angelini,L. M. Barbier,Tomaso Belloni,Sergio Campana,P. A. Caraveo,M. M. Chester,O. Citterio,T. L. Cline,Mark Cropper,Jay Cummings,Jay Cummings,A. J. Dean,Eric D. Feigelson,E. E. Fenimore,Dale A. Frail,A. S. Fruchter,Gordon P. Garmire,Keith C. Gendreau,Gabriele Ghisellini,Jochen Greiner,Joanne E. Hill,S. D. Hunsberger,Hans A. Krimm,Hans A. Krimm,Shrinivas R. Kulkarni,Pawan Kumar,F. Lebrun,Nicole M. Lloyd-Ronning,Craig B. Markwardt,Craig B. Markwardt,Barbara J. Mattson,Barbara J. Mattson,Richard Mushotzky,Jay P. Norris,J. P. Osborne,Bohdan Paczynski,David Palmer,H.-S. Park,A. M. Parsons,J. A. Paul,Martin J. Rees,Christopher S. Reynolds,James E. Rhoads,T. P. Sasseen,Bradley E. Schaefer,A. Short,Alan P. Smale,Alan P. Smale,Ian Smith,Luigi Stella,Gianpiero Tagliaferri,Tadayuki Takahashi,Makoto Tashiro,Leisa K. Townsley,Jack Tueller,Martin J. L. Turner,M. Vietri,Wolfgang Voges,Martin Ward,Richard Willingale,F. M. Zerbi,W. W. Zhang +77 more
TL;DR: The Swift mission as discussed by the authors is a multi-wavelength observatory for gamma-ray burst (GRB) astronomy, which is a first-of-its-kind autonomous rapid-slewing satellite for transient astronomy and pioneers the way for future rapid-reaction and multiwavelength missions.
PatentDOI
Coded aperture imaging with uniformly redundant arrays
E. E. Fenimore,Thomas M. Cannon +1 more
TL;DR: Computer simulations show that the URA with significant shot and background noise is vastly superior to random array techniques without noise, and permits a detector which is smaller than its random array counterpart.
Journal ArticleDOI
GRB 090423 at a redshift of z ≈ 8.1
Ruben Salvaterra,M. Della Valle,Sergio Campana,G. Chincarini,G. Chincarini,Stefano Covino,P. D'Avanzo,P. D'Avanzo,Alberto Fernández-Soto,C. Guidorzi,Filippo Mannucci,Raffaella Margutti,Raffaella Margutti,Christina C. Thöne,L. A. Antonelli,Scott Barthelmy,M. de Pasquale,V. D'Elia,Fabrizio Fiore,Dino Fugazza,L. K. Hunt,Elisabetta Maiorano,S. Marinoni,F. E. Marshall,Emilio Molinari,J. A. Nousek,Elena Pian,Judith Racusin,Luigi Stella,Lorenzo Amati,Gloria Andreuzzi,Giancarlo Cusumano,E. E. Fenimore,P. Ferrero,P. Giommi,Dafne Guetta,Stephen T. Holland,Stephen T. Holland,Kevin Hurley,G. L. Israel,J. Mao,C. B. Markwardt,C. B. Markwardt,N. Masetti,C. Pagani,Eliana Palazzi,D. M. Palmer,Silvia Piranomonte,Gianpiero Tagliaferri,Vincenzo Testa +49 more
TL;DR: Tanvir et al. as mentioned in this paper used the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope, Hawaii, from about 20 minutes after the burst and arrive at z ≈ 8.2, implying that massive stars were being produced and dying as GRBs approximately 620 million years after the Big Bang.
Journal ArticleDOI
A giant γ-ray flare from the magnetar SGR 1806–20
David Palmer,Scott Barthelmy,Neil Gehrels,R.M. Kippen,T. Cayton,Chryssa Kouveliotou,David Eichler,Ralph A. M. J. Wijers,P. M. Woods,Jonathan Granot,Y. E. Lyubarsky,Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz,L. M. Barbier,M. M. Chester,Jay Cummings,Jay Cummings,E. E. Fenimore,Mark H. Finger,Bryan Gaensler,D. Hullinger,Hans A. Krimm,Hans A. Krimm,C. B. Markwardt,C. B. Markwardt,J. A. Nousek,A. M. Parsons,Sandeep K. Patel,T. Sakamoto,T. Sakamoto,Goro Sato,Masaya Suzuki,Jack Tueller +31 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported that SGR1806-20, a soft γ-ray repeater in Sagittarius, released a giant flare that has been called the brightest explosion ever recorded.
Journal ArticleDOI
New family of binary arrays for coded aperture imaging
TL;DR: With the addition of MURAs to the family of binary arrays, all prime numbers can now be used for making optimal coded apertures, increasing the number of available square patterns by more than a factor of 3.