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The HETE-2 FREGATE and WXM instruments detected a short, hard GRB at 00:26:18.72 UT on 31 May 2002. A preliminary localization was reported as a GCN Position Notice 88 min after the burst, and a refined localization was disseminated 123 minutes later. An IPN localization of the burst was reported 18 hours after the GRB, and a refined IPN localization was disseminated ~5 days after the burst. The final IPN localization, disseminated on 25 July 2002, is a diamond-shaped region centered on RA=15h 15m 11.18s, Dec=-19o 24 27.08 (J2000), and has an area of ~9 square arcminutes (99.7% confidence region). The prompt localization of the burst by HETE-2, coupled with the refinement of the localization by the IPN, made possible the most sensitive follow-up observations to date of a short, hard GRB at radio, optical, and X-ray wavelengths. The time history of GRB020531 at high (>30 keV) energies consists of a short, intense spike followed by a much less intense secondary peak, which is characteristic of many short, hard bursts. The duration of the burst increases with decreasing energy and the spectrum of the burst evolves from hard to soft, behaviors which are similar to those of long GRBs. This suggests that short, hard GRBs are closely related to long GRBs.
The {it HETE-2} (hereafter HETE) French Gamma Telescope (FREGATE) and the Wide-field X-ray Monitor (WXM) instruments detected a short ($t_{50} = 360$ msec in the FREGATE 85-300 keV energy band), hard gamma-ray burst (GRB) that occurred at 1578.72 SOD
INTEGRAL has observed 47 long-duration GRBs (T_90 > 2s) and 1 short-duration GRB (T_90 < 2s) in five years of observation since October 2002. This work presents the properties of the prompt emission of GRB 070707, which is the first short hard GRB ob
GRB 051022 was detected at 13:07:58 on 22 October 2005 by HETE-2. The location of GRB 051022 was determined immediately by the flight localization system. This burst contains multiple pulses and has a rather long duration of about 190 seconds. The de
Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) fall into two classes: short-hard and long-soft bursts. The latter are now known to have X-ray and optical afterglows, to occur at cosmological distances in star-forming galaxies, and to be associated with the explosion of mas
GRB 070724B is the first Gamma Ray Burst localized by SuperAGILE, the hard X-ray monitor aboard the AGILE satellite. The coordinates of the event were published $sim 19$ hours after the trigger. The Swift X-Ray Telescope pointed at the SuperAGILE loc