THE FIRST LST-1 GAMMA SOURCE

13 December 2019

thefirsttele On 23 November, LST-1, the first large telescope of the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) – inaugurated in October 2018 in La Palma, in the Canary Islands – detected its first gamma source by targeting the famous Crab Nebula, considered to be the “standard candle” of high energy astrophysics. This is LST-1’s first detection of a real gamma-ray source, after the “first light” detected by the telescope on the evening between 14 and 15 December 2018. Already from the first analyses of the data collected it was possible in this second event to identify a clear high energy photon (between 20 and 200 GeV) signal coming from the Crab Nebula.After having developed and refined the analysis tools for over a year on Monte Carlo simulations, this result confirms that the tools and the analysis chain, to which INFN contributed significantly, work properly and are able to provide the first scientific results.LST-1 is the first of four Large Size Telescopes that will be present at the two CTA observation sites located in the two hemispheres, one on the island of La Palma (Canary Islands, Spain) and the other near the ESO site of Paranal in Chile.The LST telescopes will be essential for detecting high-energy gamma rays and, thanks also to their fast targeting capability, will study the weakest and most distant sources and transient phenomena, in particular gamma-ray bursts.This first result was also achieved thanks to the significant contribution of INFN and of the various Italian universities involved in the CTA project which, although still in the completion phase, with this success of LST-1, takes an important step forward and opens the way to acquisition of the first scientific data.

You might also be interested in

The cavern that will host the Hyper-Kamiokande experiment in Gifu Prefecture, Japan, and a rendering of the future configuration of the experiment. ©University of Tokyo and Nikken Sekkei

Japan: excavation of the gigantic cavern for the Hyper-K experiment completed

Pier Andrea Mandò, Professor at the University of Florence and INFN associate, at LABEC, the INFN Laboratory of nuclear techniques for the Environment and Cultural Heritage

Pier Andrea Mandò awarded the Enrico Fermi Prize 2025 by the Italian Physical Society

Positioning of one of the new ARCA detection units ©KM3NeT

ARCA-51 offshore campaign: 10,000 new eyes for KM3NeT

Infographic of the GW231123 event

LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA and the most massive black hole merger ever detected via gravitational waves

Nobel laureate Takaaki Kajita at the event for Einstein Telescope at Expo2025 Osaka

Expo2025 Osaka: Sardinia for Einstein Telescope in the spotlight with Nobel laureate Kajita

The sustainability of ET, interview with Maria Marsella