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Observations of the Crab Nebula and Pulsar with the large-sized telescope prototype of the Cherenkov telescope array

Authors :
Abe, Ko
Álvarez Crespo, Nuria
Baquero Larriva, Orlando
Barrio Uña, Juan Abel
Contreras González, José Luis
Lainez Lezaun, María
López Moya, Marcos
Mas Aguilar, Alvaro
Miener, Tjark
Miranda Pantoja, José Miguel
Morcuende, Daniel
Pérez, Ana
Tejedor Álvarez, Luis Ángel
Watson, Jason
Abe, Ko
Álvarez Crespo, Nuria
Baquero Larriva, Orlando
Barrio Uña, Juan Abel
Contreras González, José Luis
Lainez Lezaun, María
López Moya, Marcos
Mas Aguilar, Alvaro
Miener, Tjark
Miranda Pantoja, José Miguel
Morcuende, Daniel
Pérez, Ana
Tejedor Álvarez, Luis Ángel
Watson, Jason
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) is a next-generation ground-based observatory for gamma-ray astronomy at very high energies. The Large-Sized Telescope prototype (LST-1) is located at the CTA-North site, on the Canary Island of La Palma. LSTs are designed to provide optimal performance in the lowest part of the energy range covered by CTA, down to ≃20 GeV. LST-1 started performing astronomical observations in 2019 November, during its commissioning phase, and it has been taking data ever since. We present the first LST-1 observations of the Crab Nebula, the standard candle of very-high-energy gamma-ray astronomy, and use them, together with simulations, to assess the performance of the telescope. LST-1 has reached the expected performance during its commissioning period—only a minor adjustment of the preexisting simulations was needed to match the telescope's behavior. The energy threshold at trigger level is around 20 GeV, rising to ≃30 GeV after data analysis. Performance parameters depend strongly on energy, and on the strength of the gamma-ray selection cuts in the analysis: angular resolution ranges from 0fdg12–0fdg40, and energy resolution from 15%–50%. Flux sensitivity is around 1.1% of the Crab Nebula flux above 250 GeV for a 50 hr observation (12% for 30 minutes). The spectral energy distribution (in the 0.03–30 TeV range) and the light curve obtained for the Crab Nebula agree with previous measurements, considering statistical and systematic uncertainties. A clear periodic signal is also detected from the pulsar at the center of the Nebula.<br />Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)<br />Comunidad de Madrid<br />Ministerio de Industria y Turismo (España)<br />Fundación La Caixa<br />Junta de Andalucia<br />Gobierno de Canarias<br />Generalitat de Catalunya<br />Depto. de Estructura de la Materia, Física Térmica y Electrónica<br />Fac. de Ciencias Físicas<br />TRUE<br />pub

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, 0004-637X, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1450540719
Document Type :
Electronic Resource