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.
Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
Inverse comptonization vs. thermal synchrotron
TL;DR: In this article, the authors concluded that thermal synchrotron is more consistent with the observations if the sources are ∼40 kpc away from the source, whereas inverse comptonization is consistent if they are ∼300 pc away.
Journal Article
Swift-BAT time history of GRB041219.
E. E. Fenimore,S. D. Barthelmy,J. Cummings,N. Gehrels,D. Hullinger,H. A. Krimm,C. B. Markwardt,Kirsty J. McLean,D. M. Palmer,A. M. Parsons,J. Tueller +10 more
Journal Article
GRB 070724, Swift-BAT refined analysis of a short burst.
A. M. Parsons,L. M. Barbier,S. D. Barthelmy,J. Cummings,E. E. Fenimore,N. Gehrels,H. A. Krimm,C. B. Markwardt,D. M. Palmer,T. Sakamoto,G. Sato,M. Stamatikos,J. Tueller,T. N. Ukwatta,Houri Ziaeepour +14 more
Searching for optical transients in real-time : the RAPTOR experiment /.
W. T. Vestrand,Konstantin N. Borozdin,Steven P. Brumby,D. J. Casperson,E. E. Fenimore,M. Galassi,Galen Gisler,K. E. McGowan,Simon Perkins,William C. Priedhorsky,D. Starr,Robert White,Przemyslaw Wozniak,Jim Wren +13 more
TL;DR: In this article, a wide-field optical monitoring system, RAPTOR, is proposed to identify and make follow-up observations of optical transients in real-time, which is composed of an array of telescopes that continuously monitor about 1500 square degrees of the sky for transients down to about 12' magnitude in 60 seconds.
Posted Content
GRB 020531: A Short, Hard Gamma-Ray Burst Localized and Observed by HETE-2
D. Q. Lamb,George R. Ricker,J. L. Atteia,K. Hurley,N. Kawai,Y. Shirasaki,T. Sakamoto,T. Tamagawa,T. Q. Donaghy,C. Graziani,C. Barraud,J. F. Olive,Atsumasa Yoshida,Kazufumi Torii,E. E. Fenimore,M. Galassi,R. Vanderspek +16 more
TL;DR: The HETE-2 FREGATE and WXM instruments detected a short, hard GRB at 00:26:18.72 UT on 31 May 2002 and reported a preliminary localization as a GCN Position Notice 88 min after the burst, and a refined localization was disseminated 123 minutes later as mentioned in this paper.