Gamma-ray Astronomy Missions, and their Use of a Global Telescope Network

Similar documents
Science of Compact X-Ray and Gamma-ray Objects: MAXI and GLAST

GLAST Mission: Status and Science Opportunities

The Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope

Fermi: Highlights of GeV Gamma-ray Astronomy

Extreme Astronomy and Supernovae. Professor Lynn Cominsky Department of Physics and Astronomy Sonoma State University

Gamma-ray Astrophysics

GLAST. Welcome and Introductions. GLAST Pre-launch Media Telecon May 27, The Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope

Cherenkov Telescope Array ELINA LINDFORS, TUORLA OBSERVATORY ON BEHALF OF CTA CONSORTIUM, TAUP

GLAST. Exploring the Extreme Universe. Kennedy Space Center. The Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope

Gamma-ray Astrophysics and High Density e+ e- Plasma - A new application of Free Electron Laser? -

EBL Studies with the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope

Gamma-Ray Astronomy. Astro 129: Chapter 1a

Astrophysics with GLAST: dark matter, black holes and other astronomical exotica

GLAST - Exploring the high- energy gamma-ray Universe

The Extragalactic Gamma-Ray View of AGILE and Fermi

Gamma Ray Physics in the Fermi era. F.Longo University of Trieste and INFN

Can we constrain GRB shock parameters using the Gamma Ray Large Area Space Telescope? Eduardo do Couto e Silva SLAC/KIPAC SABER Workshop Mar 15, 2006

High-Energy Emission from GRBs: First Year Highlights from the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope

PERSPECTIVES of HIGH ENERGY NEUTRINO ASTRONOMY. Paolo Lipari Vulcano 27 may 2006

Space Astronomy Facilities

Special Topics in Nuclear and Particle Physics

How Telescopes Have Changed Our View of the Universe Webinar I: Anti-matter Eyes on the Gamma-ray Skies

The Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope

(Fermi observations of) High-energy emissions from gamma-ray bursts

Two Space High Energy Astrophysics Missions of China: POLAR & HXMT

The Swift GRB MIDEX. Neil Gehrels May 20, 2002

MeV Quasar Observations with the. COMPTON Gamma Ray Observatory

GLAST Large Area Telescope:

Rest-frame properties of gamma-ray bursts observed by the Fermi Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor

Using Gamma Ray Bursts to Estimate Luminosity Distances. Shanel Deal

News from the Niels Bohr International Academy

GLAST LAT Multiwavelength Studies Needs and Resources

from Fermi (Higher Energy Astrophysics)

Dark matter searches with GLAST

Future Gamma-Ray Observations of Pulsars and their Environments

Bringing Real-time Astronomical Observations into the Classroom

Diffuse Gamma-Ray Emission

The Fermi Gamma-Ray Sky

First Year Fermi Gamma ray Space Telescope Observations of Centaurus A

NuSTAR s Extreme Universe. Prof. Lynn Cominsky NASA Education and Public Outreach Sonoma State University

GRB detection at ground level using Water Cerenkov Tanks

Introduction to Gamma-ray Burst Astrophysics

Gamma-Ray Bursts - I. Stellar Transients / Gamma Ray Bursts I 1

Experimental Particle

The Gamma Large Area Space Telescope: GLAST

HAWC: A Next Generation All-Sky VHE Gamma-Ray Telescope

A New Look at the Galactic Diffuse GeV Excess

Detectors for 20 kev 10 MeV

Milagro A TeV Observatory for Gamma Ray Bursts

The Gamma ray sky seen by. Telescope. F.Longo INFN Trieste, CIFS Torino. on behalf of the Fermi LAT collaboration

A NEW GENERATION OF GAMMA-RAY TELESCOPE

Observing GRBs with. Tania Garrigoux NWU, Potchefstroom

Linking GLAST Science Prospects with CTA

Supporting the GLAST User Community

The Discovery of Gamma-Ray Bursts

Introduction. Technical and Production Status L. Klaisner. Instrument Science Operations Center Plans. Project Status, Cost and Schedule L.

GLAST LAT Overview and Status

Fermi Gamma Ray Space Telescope: Launch+509. Roger Blandford KIPAC Stanford (With considerable help from Fermi team members working at Stanford)

Fermi Large Area Telescope:

Particle Acceleration in the Universe

RXTE Observations of PKS during the November 1997 Gamma-Ray Outburst

Detecting New Sources of High-Energy Gamma Rays

COSMIC RAYS DAY INTRODUCTION TO COSMIC RAYS WINDWARD COMMUNITY COLLEGE - SEPTEMBER 26, 2015 VERONICA BINDI - UNIVERSITY OH HAWAII

On the scientific motivation for a wide field-of-view TeV gamma-ray observatory in the Southern Hemisphere

High Energy Emission. Brenda Dingus, LANL HAWC

Detection of transient sources with the ANTARES telescope. Manuela Vecchi CPPM

Major Option C1 Astrophysics. C1 Astrophysics

10 Years. of TeV Extragalactic Science. with VERITAS. Amy Furniss California State University East Bay

A very wide field focusing telescope for Synoptic studies in the soft X-ray band

X-ray Astronomy F R O M V - R O CKETS TO AT HENA MISSION. Thanassis Akylas

GLAST and beyond GLAST: TeV Astrophysics

Scale the Universe. Exploring your Universe from Inner to Outer Space. Linda L. Smith NASA Astrophysics Educator Ambassador

Frontiers: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Highlights of GeV gamma-ray astronomy

Recent Results from VERITAS

Overview of the GLAST Observatory Current status of two instruments (GBM and LAT)

AGILE Highlights. The AGILE Mission. Stefano Vercellone and the AGILE Team at IASF Milano

1. GAMMA-RAY BURSTS & 2. FAST RADIO BURSTS

GAMMA-RAY BURST PHYSICS WITH GLAST

Gamma-ray Astrophysics with VERITAS: Exploring the violent Universe

Lecture 20 High-Energy Astronomy. HEA intro X-ray astrophysics a very brief run through. Swift & GRBs 6.4 kev Fe line and the Kerr metric

MILAGRO. 1 The Milagro detector. SABRINA CASANOVA for THE MILAGRO COLLABORATION. Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, 87545, US

SCIPP Research Program

Recent Observations of Supernova Remnants

IXYZ Frank Marshall NASA/GSFC 25 April April 25, 2012 Implementing Portals of the Universe

Expected and unexpected gamma-ray emission from GRBs in light of AGILE and Fermi. Marco Tavani (INAF & University of Rome Tor Vergata)

The Extreme Universe Rene A. Ong Univ. of Michigan Colloquium University of California, Los Angeles 23 March 2005

Extreme high-energy variability of Markarian 421

Xenon Compton Telescopes at Columbia: the post LXeGRIT phase. E.Aprile. Columbia University

GLAST. Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope. Telescope. P. Michelson GLAST LAT Spokesperson Stanford University

Relativistic jets from XRBs with LOFAR. Stéphane Corbel (University Paris 7 & CEA Saclay)

Sources of GeV Photons and the Fermi Results

GRB Simulations in GLAST

Gamma-ray Bursts. Chapter 4

Following up Fermi GBM Gamma-Ray Bursts

The Large Area Telescope on-board of the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope Mission

Gamma-ray observations of millisecond pulsars with the Fermi LAT. Lucas Guillemot, MPIfR Bonn. NS2012 in Bonn 27/02/12.

Recent highlights from VERITAS

arxiv: v1 [astro-ph.he] 16 Jan 2018

AGILE GRBs: detections and upper limits

Transcription:

Gamma-ray Astronomy Missions, and their Use of a Global Telescope Network

The Big Picture Whole sky glows Extreme environments Probes of the Universe CGRO/EGRET All Sky Map

Early Gamma-ray Astronomy Gamma-ray Bursts Vela Program : A Bomb or Not a Bomb? A few hundred events, a few hundred theories Gamma-ray Sources SAS-2 discovered 2 pulsars (1972) COS-B about 25 sources (1975-82) Most unidentified, but 1 quasar Diffuse extra-galactic background

Sources of γ-ray Emission Black holes Active Galaxies Pulsars Gamma-ray bursts Diffuse emission Supernovae Unidentified movie

CGRO (1991-2000)

Dr. Arthur Holly Compton 1927 Nobel Prize for Compton Effect First experimental proof of dual wave and particle nature of light

BATSE

Gamma-Ray Bursts

Distribution of GRBs in the Sky

Gamma-ray Coordinates Network (GCN)

Gamma-ray Coordinates Network (GCN) Originally developed at NASA/MSFC as BACODINE under Scott Barthelmy to support BATSE positions/identifications Now at NASA/GSFC it distributes near real time GRB positions from active satellites as well as reports of follow-up observations by ground-based observers To join: http://gcn.gsfc.nasa.gov /invitation.html

Gamma-ray Burst Progress Beppo/SAX finds evidence for X-ray afterglow from several GRBs (2/28/97) Jan van Paradijs finds optical afterglow Redshifts indicate cosmological distances (Keck, HST) ROTSE catches GRB in the act at visible wavelengths (1/23/99) Evidence mounts for two types of GRBs

What BeppoSAX Saw

What HST Saw (Much Later)

Models for GRBs Hypernova Merging Neutron Stars

EGRET

Third EGRET Catalog Sky Map

EGRET Blazars 3C279 is brightest AGN at high energies Multi-wavele ngth coverage essential to understand flare mechanism

Blazar questions Where are the acceleration and emission sites in blazar jets? Multi-wavelength campaigns from radio to TeV How do galaxies cool their jets? Study X/γ Are jets leptonic or hadronic? Study H-α/γ to distinguish between leptonic models. Study X/γ to distinguish leptonic/hadronic models All require energy and time-resolved spectra of blazars during flares and quiescence

HETE II Launched 10/9/00 Operational 2/01 Good data starts ~8/15/01 GRB positions from 10 to 10 to GCN within a few seconds Will detect about 30 GRBs per year Anti-solar pointing optimized for ground observers

Coordinating with HETE HETE has ~12 ground stations near the equator to transmit positions in near real time Sockets are available through GCN ( http://gcn.gsfc.nasa.gov/) to get burst alerts as they occur To see where HETE is pointing: http://space.mit.edu/hete/mission_status.htm l#hetepointing It will soon be leaving the galactic center and better data should be forthcoming!

Swift To be launched in 2003 Repoints within 50 s for X-ray and optical data Sends initial coordinates to ground within 15 s Sends high resolution coordinates to ground within 50 s Detects about 300 GRBs per year

Swift Telescope Network Swift has many Associate Investigators who will be observing GRB targets Kevin Hurley (UCB) is coordinating these professional astronomers Swift positions will be available through GCN GLAST Telescope network members will be invited to test their systems using Swift and HETE alerts scientific coordination will be probably also be possible

GLAST To be launched in 2006 GLAST Burst Monitor and Large Area Telescope will study GRBs over energies 10 MeV 300 GeV High-energy GRs from AGN flares

Mission First space-based collaboration between astrophysics and particle physics communities Launch expected in 2006 First year All-sky Survey followed by Competitive Guest Observer Program Expected duration 5-10 years

GLAST Burst Monitor PI Charles Meegan (NASA/MSFC) US-German secondary instrument 12 Sodium Iodide scintillators» Few kev to 1 MeV» Burst triggers and locations 2 bismuth germanate detectors» 150 kev to 30 MeV» Overlap with LAT http://gammaray.msfc.nasa.gov/gbm/

Large Area Telescope PI Peter Michelson (Stanford) International Collaboration: USA NASA and DoE, France, Italy, Japan, Sweden LAT is a 4 x 4 array of towers Each tower is a pair conversion telescope with calorimeter http://www-glast.stanford.edu

GLAST All Sky Map

GLAST Telescope Network As part of the GLAST EPO program, we are assembling a global telescope network of amateurs, students and professionals RCT will be participating through John Mattox SLAC will archive all data for RCT Targets for GLAST will be both GRBs and AGN flares SSU Observatory will also be participating Gordon Spear is directing this effort All are welcome to join!

For More Information HETE Mission- http://space.mit.edu/hete Swift Mission - http://swift.sonoma.edu/ GLAST Mission - http://www-glast.sonoma.edu/ CGRO Mission - http://cossc.gsfc.nasa.gov