The MAGIC telescope and the GLAST satellite La Palma, Roque de los Muchacos (28.8° latitude -...

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The MAGIC telescope and the GLAST satellite La Palma, Roque de los Muchacos (28.8° latitude - 17.8° longitude, 2225 m asl) INAUGURATION: 10/10/2003 LAT (mass ~ 3000 kg) GBM (mass ~ 55 kg ) LAUNCH: ~ 2007

Transcript of The MAGIC telescope and the GLAST satellite La Palma, Roque de los Muchacos (28.8° latitude -...

Page 1: The MAGIC telescope and the GLAST satellite La Palma, Roque de los Muchacos (28.8° latitude - 17.8° longitude, 2225 m asl) INAUGURATION: 10/10/2003 LAT.

The MAGIC telescope and the GLAST satellite

La Palma, Roque de los Muchacos

(28.8° latitude - 17.8° longitude, 2225 m asl)

INAUGURATION: 10/10/2003

LAT (mass ~ 3000 kg)GBM (mass ~ 55 kg )

LAUNCH: ~ 2007

Page 2: The MAGIC telescope and the GLAST satellite La Palma, Roque de los Muchacos (28.8° latitude - 17.8° longitude, 2225 m asl) INAUGURATION: 10/10/2003 LAT.

THE NEXT GENERATION OF γ-RAY DETECTORS.

Ground based and satellite experiments are to some extent complementary for our purpose.

– ACT detectors (MAGIC, HESS, VERITAS, CANGAROO):• limitate exposure times,• an upper energy threshold,• a very large effective area,• a medium energy resolution,• a point-likesurvey.

– Satellite experiments (GLAST): • long exposure times,• a lower energy threshold,• a small effective area,• a good energy resolution,• a 4survey.

Page 3: The MAGIC telescope and the GLAST satellite La Palma, Roque de los Muchacos (28.8° latitude - 17.8° longitude, 2225 m asl) INAUGURATION: 10/10/2003 LAT.

MAGIC Characteristics

Effective area 2,3 · 106 cm2

Energy resolution (σE/E) ~ 50% (10 GeV) ~ 20% (100 GeV)Angular resolution (σθ) ~ 0.05º (transverse) ~ 0.2º (longitudinal)Energy threshold ~ 30 GeV Field of view (sr) 4º Sensitivity 8 · 10-11 cm–2 s–1

GLAST Characteristics

Effective area 104 cm2

Energy resolution (σE/E) 9% (100 MeV on-axis) <15% (10 - 300 GeV on-axis)Angular resolution (σθ) 3.37º (front), 4.64º (total) (100 MeV on-axis) 0.086º (front), 0.115º (total) (10 GeV on-axis)Energy threshold ~ 20 MeV Field of view (sr) 2.4 Sensitivity ( > 100 MeV) 3 · 10-9 cm–2 s–1

Page 4: The MAGIC telescope and the GLAST satellite La Palma, Roque de los Muchacos (28.8° latitude - 17.8° longitude, 2225 m asl) INAUGURATION: 10/10/2003 LAT.

COMPARISON among gamma telescopes

Page 5: The MAGIC telescope and the GLAST satellite La Palma, Roque de los Muchacos (28.8° latitude - 17.8° longitude, 2225 m asl) INAUGURATION: 10/10/2003 LAT.

COMPLEMENTARITY between the two experiments

MAGIC

a very large collection area

GLAST very large field of view high duty cicle wide energy range excellent energy resolution low systematic energy calibration uncertainties (the new imaging Cherenkov telescopes are being built to slew within a few tens of

seconds following notification)

providing the ground-based observers with alerts for

transient sources

capability of detecting very short flares

from known sources

Page 6: The MAGIC telescope and the GLAST satellite La Palma, Roque de los Muchacos (28.8° latitude - 17.8° longitude, 2225 m asl) INAUGURATION: 10/10/2003 LAT.

For individual point sources,

MAGIC has unparalleled sensitivity at very high energies, with the ability to resolve shorter-duration flares.

For many objects, full multiwavelenght coverage over as wide an energy range as possible will be needed to understand the acceleration and gamma-ray production mechanism.

GLAST’s observations of steady sources at the highest energies will be used to reduce the systematic

errors in the sensitivities of the ground – based observatories.

At energies above ~10 GeV,

the spectra from distant AGNs may be cut off due to absorption by the extragalactic background light.

Spectral measurements by both GLAST & MAGIC will be needed to measure these absorptive effects accurately and thus determine

the spectrum of the EBL from microwave to optical wavelenghts.

Page 7: The MAGIC telescope and the GLAST satellite La Palma, Roque de los Muchacos (28.8° latitude - 17.8° longitude, 2225 m asl) INAUGURATION: 10/10/2003 LAT.

GLAST, with its good energy resolution, is favoured in observing the combined effect of the continuous component and the line;

BUT if Mχis higher than GLAST’s threshold MAGIC, owing to its

larger effective area, is more adeguate for this purpose.

LEP + MSUGRA: Mχ> 40 GeV

DETECTION PROSPECTS: Dark Matter

Page 8: The MAGIC telescope and the GLAST satellite La Palma, Roque de los Muchacos (28.8° latitude - 17.8° longitude, 2225 m asl) INAUGURATION: 10/10/2003 LAT.

On the other hand:

GLAST, with its wide angular acceptance, is an ideal instrument to measure eventual local enhancements in the γ-ray flux due to clumps of dark matter.

The dependence on the profile which describes the dark matter distribution is in particular critical for detectors like MAGIC which have a small angular acceptance;

BUT

If a large fraction of the total flux emitted is concentred in a tiny region of the sky, whose coordinates are known with sufficient accuracy, an ACT can be the ideal instrument for detecting neutralino dark matter.

Page 9: The MAGIC telescope and the GLAST satellite La Palma, Roque de los Muchacos (28.8° latitude - 17.8° longitude, 2225 m asl) INAUGURATION: 10/10/2003 LAT.

Pulsar

POLAR CAP

MODELS:

ray spectra cutoff

very sharply, “superexponential”

OUTER GAP MODELS:

ray spectra cutoff more slowly,

as a simple exponential

POLAR CAP MODELS:

ray spectra cutoff very sharply, “superexponential”

GLAST: energy resolution, dynamic range

MAGIC: energy threshold

Page 10: The MAGIC telescope and the GLAST satellite La Palma, Roque de los Muchacos (28.8° latitude - 17.8° longitude, 2225 m asl) INAUGURATION: 10/10/2003 LAT.

DEVELOPMENTS