Sep 18 – 21, 2018
Cochem (Mosel), Germany
Europe/Berlin timezone
31st Jul Registration | 31th Aug Early Bird | 15th Oct Papers

Session

Gamma-Ray

Sep 18, 2018, 9:20 AM
Cochem (Mosel), Germany

Cochem (Mosel), Germany

Kapuzinerkloster, Klosterberg 5, 56812 Cochem

Conveners

Gamma-Ray: Gamma-Ray 1

  • Thomas Bretz (RWTH Aachen University)

Gamma-Ray: Gamma-ray 2

  • Jean-Philippe Lenain (LPNHE, CNRS/IN2P3)

Gamma-Ray: Gamma-ray 3

  • David Thompson (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center)

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.

  1. David Thompson (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center)
    9/18/18, 9:20 AM
    Oral

    Since 2008, the Large Area Telescope and the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor on the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope have been monitoring the entire sky at energies from less than 10 keV to more than 1 TeV. Photon-level data and high-level data products are made publically available in near-real time, and efforts continue to improve the response time. This long-duration, all-sky monitoring has enabled...

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  2. Jean-Philippe Lenain (LPNHE, CNRS/IN2P3)
    9/18/18, 9:50 AM
    Oral

    Blazars exhibit strong variability, and abrupt changes in their flux are observed at high energies down to hour-, or even minute-time scales. Regular monitoring and prompt identication of these variations is key to organise quick follow-up observations. Thanks to its allsky monitoring capabilities, the Fermi-LAT is a very powerful instrument to survey the high energy sky and reveal such...

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  3. Carlo Romoli (MPIK)
    9/18/18, 10:10 AM
    Oral

    The blazar Mrk 501 is a well-known BL-Lac type object, highly variable, on timescales down to a few minutes at TeV energies.
    For the study of its gamma-ray emission, we can now fully exploit the complementarity of Fermi-LAT and ground based telescopes. In particular, at TeV energies, the First G-APD Cherenkov Telescope (FACT) performs unbiased monitoring of a small sample of blazars including...

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  4. Jose Andres Garcia-Gonzalez (IF-UNAM)
    9/19/18, 4:15 PM
    Oral

    The First G-APD Cherenkov Telescope (FACT) has been monitoring blazars at TeV energies for more than six years. Because of the automatic operations and the usage of robust solid state photosensors (SiPM, aka G-APDs), it has been possible to collect a large and unbiased data sample of more than 11,000 hours. One of the closest and brightest blazars in the gamma-ray/X-ray sky, Mrk 421, is...

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  5. Amit Shukla (Institut für Theoretische Physik und Astrophysik, Universität Würzburg)
    9/19/18, 4:35 PM
    Oral

    The locations of emission of gamma-ray radiation in active galactic nuclei jet are highly debated and it range from light-hours to a few light-year in quasar jets. The situation is more complex in the case of flat spectrum radio quasars, where the gamma-rays photons above 10 GeV may interact with the UV radiation from broad line region and get absorbed. I will be talking about the recent...

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  6. Michael Zacharias (TP IV, Ruhr-Universität Bochum)
    9/19/18, 4:55 PM
    Oral + Poster

    PKS 1510-089 is one of only a handful of flat spectrum radio quasars detected in very high energy (VHE, E > 100 GeV) gamma rays. Since the first detection in 2009, the source has been monitored VHE. Here, we present one special event that is a direct result of the monitoring effort. In May 2016, a major VHE gamma-ray flare was observed from PKS 1510-089 by the H.E.S.S. and MAGIC telescopes....

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  7. Daniela Dorner (Universität Würzburg)
    9/19/18, 5:15 PM
    Oral

    Blazars are known to show variability on time scales from minutes to
    years. This complicates the measurement of their ground state. For
    this, long-term monitoring is important to increase the chance to study
    the source in an all-time low state.

    The First G-APD Cherenkov Telescope (FACT) is monitoring bright TeV
    blazars since more than six years and has collected between 1500 and
    3000 hours of...

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  8. Dr Maria Magdalena Gonzalez (Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico)
    9/21/18, 9:00 AM
    Oral

    The High-Altitude Water Cherenkov (HAWC) observatory is a wide field-of-view instrument under operations since March 2015 and located in the state of Puebla, México. HAWC observes two thirds of the sky daily at energies between 0.1 and 100 TeV with a duty cycle greater than 95%. This capability allows us to monitor unbiasedly known sources as the Mrk 421 blazar, to search blindly for transient...

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  9. Alicja Wierzcholska
    9/21/18, 9:30 AM
    Oral

    Despite several years of observation, the nature of blazars' variability remains still enigmatic.
    Thus, simultaneous multi-wavelength monitoring, including observations in the TeV regime is an important tool for understanding the nature of these objects.
    In this talk I will present results of H.E.S.S. monitoring of two famous blazars: BL Lacertae type one PKS 2155-304 and flat spectrum radio...

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  10. Mr Axel Arbet-Engels
    9/21/18, 9:50 AM
    Oral

    The First G-APD Cherenkov Telescope (FACT) is an imaging air Cherenkov
    telescope observing in the very high energy gamma-ray regime since
    October 2011. Thanks to its silicon-based photosensors and robotic
    operation, it has a stable performance and a maximized duty cycle.
    Therefore, it is ideally suited for long-term monitoring. Focussing on
    regular observations of a small selection of bright...

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  11. Dr Werner Collmar (Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik)
    9/21/18, 10:10 AM
    Oral

    The COMPTEL experiment aboard the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory (CGRO) explored
    the MeV sky (0.75 - 30 MeV) for more than 9 years between April 1991 and June 2000,
    providing many discoveries. Now, more than 18 years after the deorbit of CGRO, the
    COMPTEL data are still the forefront of our knowledge on the non-thermal soft gamma-ray
    sky (1 - 30 MeV), because no successor is yet operating.

    The...

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  12. Maria Magdalena Gonzalez (Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico)
    Poster

    Blazars are extremely variable objects emitting radiation across the electromagnetic spectrum and showing variability on time scales from minutes to years. Simultaneous multi-wavelength observations are crucial for understanding the emission mechanisms. From radio via optical, X-ray to gamma rays, a variety of instruments, as Fermi and OVRO, are already monitoring blazars. At TeV energies,...

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