GRIS was selected for a balloon program after the removal of a high-resolution gamma-ray spectrometer from the payload of what would become the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory. GRIS first flew in May 1988 from Alice Springs, Australia. During its first several flights, the instrument definitively measured the gamma ray lines from Supernova 1987A, including that of 56Co, and the positron annihilation line from the Galactic Center at 511 keV, elucidating the nature of these emissions. Measurements resulted in two letters in Nature and three in The Astrophysical Journal, and earned the John Lindsay Memorial Award for Science from Goddard Space Flight Center. GRIS was flown a total of nine times between 1988 and 1995, with a total flight time of 223 hours. In a configuration that included a wide-field collimator and blocking crystal mechanism, GRIS measured the diffuse galactic and cosmic gamma-ray spectra, yielding insight into the production of 26Al in the galaxy. During its final two flights from Alice Springs, GRIS carried the PoRTIA instrument, which yielded measurements of the CdZnTe detector background for use in future instrument design. Following the program, the Goddard team proposed transferring the instrument to the University of Maryland to be refurbished for the Long Duration Balloon program, which would entail reconfiguring the instrument for wide field-of-view studies of diffuse emissions. The program would involve graduate and undergraduate student researchers, and would address observation regimes inaccessible to the INTEGRAL mission. The GRIS instrument was flown with a helium-filled balloon to a typical altitude of 40 kilometres . The GRIS instrument carried seven n-type germanium detectors with a range of sensitivity between 20 and 8000 keV and a combined energy resolution of 1.8 keV at an energy of 500 keV. Each detector was 6.5 cm in diameter by 6.5 cm deep , for a total detector area of 242 square centimetres and a total detector volume of 1,560 cubic centimetres . The instrument had a three-sigma narrow line sensitivity of 1.7 x 10?4 picohenries per square centimeter per second at 500 keV over 12 hours, and a field of view of 17 degrees at 500 keV. The experimental payload had a weight of 1,634 kilograms , and used 350 Watts of power.
Video game information for GRIS, including publisher, developer, localizers, and more. Information is maintained by the community and may be incomplete, but you can help complete this video game information for GRIS by filling it out or improving it. You'll earn WAD to promote yourself on GameSense.co as well as experience to increase your effect on changing video game scores with your post reactions and video game ratings.
GameSense.co is a video game database, review, news, video, and social website for managing your video games and filtering video game information. Manage your video games with your GameSense.co video game backlog.