Paper
29 July 2010 The VLT rapid-response mode: implementation and scientific results
Paul M. Vreeswijk, Andreas Kaufer, Jason Spyromilio, Ricardo Schmutzer, Cédric Ledoux, Alain Smette, Annalisa De Cia
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Abstract
The Rapid-Response Mode (RRM) at ESO's Very Large Telescope (VLT) allows for rapid automatic observations of any highly variable target such as Gamma-Ray Burst (GRB) afterglows. This mode has been available for various instruments at the VLT since April 2004, and can be easily implemented for any new instumentation. Apart from discussing the operational side of this mode, we also present VLT/UVES GRB afterglow spectra observed using the RRM, which show clear variability of absorption lines at the redshift the GRB host galaxy. Without the RRM this variability would not have been observed. Using photo-excitation and -ionization modelling, we show that this varibility is due to the afterglow flux exciting and ionizing a gas cloud at distances varying from tens of parsecs to kiloparsecs away from the GRB.
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Paul M. Vreeswijk, Andreas Kaufer, Jason Spyromilio, Ricardo Schmutzer, Cédric Ledoux, Alain Smette, and Annalisa De Cia "The VLT rapid-response mode: implementation and scientific results", Proc. SPIE 7737, Observatory Operations: Strategies, Processes, and Systems III, 77370M (29 July 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.859027
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Iron

Telescopes

Nickel

Ultraviolet radiation

Absorption

Data modeling

Clouds

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