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Owing to narrow energy band of textit{Swift}/BAT, several urgent issues are required to pay more attentions but unsolved so far. We systematically study the properties of a refined sample of 283 textit{Swift}/BAT gamma-ray bursts with well-measured spectral peak energy ($E_{text p}$) at a high confidence level larger than 3$sigma$. It is interestingly found that duration ($T_{90}$) distribution of textit{Swift} bursts still exhibits an evident bimodality with a more reliable boundary of $T_{90}simeq$1.06 s instead of 2 s for previously contaminated samples including bursts without well-peaked spectra, which is very close to $sim$1.27 s and $sim$0.8 s suggested by some authors for Fermi/GBM and textit{Swift}/BAT catalogs, respectively. The textit{Swift}/BAT short and long bursts have comparable mean $E_{text p}$ values of $87^{+112}_{-49}$ and $85^{+101}_{-46}$ keV in each, similar to what found for both types of BATSE bursts, which manifests the traditional short-hard/long-soft scheme may not be tenable for the certain energy window of a detector. In statistics, we also investigate the consistency of distinct methods for the $E_{text p}$ estimates and find that Bayesian approach and BAND function can always give consistent evaluations. In contrast, the frequently-used cut-off power-law model matches two other methods for lower $E_{text p}$ and will overestimate the $E_{text p}$ more than 70% as $E_{text p}>$100 keV. Peak energies of X-ray flashes, X-ray rich bursts and classical gamma-ray bursts could have an evolutionary consequence from thermal-dominated to non-thermal-dominated radiation mechanisms. Finally, we find that the $E_{text p}$ and the observed fluence ($S_{gamma}$) in the observer frame are correlated as $E_psimeq [S_{gamma}/(10^{-5} erg cm^{-2})]^{0.28}times 117.5^{+44.7}_{-32.4}$ keV proposed to be an useful indicator of GRB peak energies.
We use a nearly complete sample of Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) detected by the Swift satellite to study the correlations between the spectral peak energy Ep of the prompt emission, the isotropic energetics Eiso and the isotropic luminosity Liso. This GRB
Decades ago two classes of gamma-ray bursts were identified and delineated as having durations shorter and longer than about 2 s. Subsequently indications also supported the existence of a third class. Using maximum likelihood estimation we analyze t
We collect and reanalyze about 200 GRB data of prompt-emission with known redshift observed until the end of 2009, and select 101 GRBs which were well observed to have good spectral parameters to determine the spectral peak energy ($E_p$), 1-second p
We present the results of sixteen Swift-triggered GRB follow-up observations taken with the VERITAS telescope array from January, 2007 to June, 2009. The median energy threshold and response time of these observations was 260 GeV and 320 s, respectiv
Timing analysis is a powerful tool with which to shed light on the still obscure emission physics and geometry of the prompt emission of GRBs. Fourier power density spectra (PDS) characterise time series as stochastic processes and can be used to sea