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Observations with the High Altitude GAmma Ray (HAGAR) telescope array in the Indian Himalayas

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dc.contributor.author Britto, R. J
dc.contributor.author Acharya, B. S
dc.contributor.author Anupama, G. C
dc.contributor.author Bhatt, N
dc.contributor.author Bhattacharjee, P
dc.contributor.author Bhattacharya, S. S
dc.contributor.author Chitnis, V. R
dc.contributor.author Cowsik, R
dc.contributor.author Dorji, N
dc.contributor.author Duhan, S. K
dc.contributor.author Gothe, K. S
dc.contributor.author Kamath, P. U
dc.contributor.author Koul, R
dc.contributor.author Mahesh, P. K
dc.contributor.author Mitra, A
dc.contributor.author Nagesh, B. K
dc.contributor.author Parmar, N. K
dc.contributor.author Prabhu, T. P
dc.contributor.author Rannot, R. C
dc.contributor.author Rao, S. K
dc.contributor.author Saha, L
dc.contributor.author Saleem, F
dc.contributor.author Saxena, A. K
dc.contributor.author Sharma, S. K
dc.contributor.author Shukla, A
dc.contributor.author Singh, B. B
dc.contributor.author Srinivasan, R
dc.contributor.author Srinivasulu, G
dc.contributor.author Sudersanan, P. V
dc.contributor.author Tickoo, A. K
dc.contributor.author Tsewang, D
dc.contributor.author Upadhya, S
dc.contributor.author Vishwanath, P. R
dc.contributor.author Yadav, K. K
dc.date.accessioned 2012-04-04T12:23:03Z
dc.date.available 2012-04-04T12:23:03Z
dc.date.issued 2010-12
dc.identifier.citation SF2A-2010: Proceedings of the Annual meeting of the French Society of Astronomy and Astrophysics. Eds.: S. Boissier, M. Heydari-Malayeri, R. Samadi and D. Valls-Gabaud, pp. 133 - 135 en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2248/5744
dc.description Open Access en
dc.description.abstract For several decades, it was thought that astrophysical sources emit high energy photons within the energy range of the gamma-ray region of the lectromagnetic spectrum also. These photons originate from interactions of high energy articles from sources involving violent phenomena in the Universe (supernovae, pulsars, Active Galactic Nuclei, etc.) with gas and radiation fields. Since the _rst reliable detections of cosmic gamma rays in the 1970's, improvements in instrumentation have led gamma-ray astronomy to an established branch of modern Astrophysics, with a constant increase in the number of detected sources. But the 30-300 GeV energy range remained sparsely explored until the launch of the Fermi space telescope in June 2008. The ground-based gamma-ray telescope array HAGAR is the first array of atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes established at a so high altitude (4270 m a.s.l.), and was designed to reach a relatively low energy threshold with quite a low mirror area (31 m/sup2/). It is located at Hanle in India, in the Ladakh region of the Himalayas. Regular source observations have begun with the complete setup of 7 telescopes on Sept. 2008. We report and discuss our estimation of the systematics through dark region studies, and present preliminary results from gamma-ray sources in this paper. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher French Society of Astronomy and Astrophysics en
dc.relation.uri http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2010sf2a.conf..133B en
dc.rights © French Society of Astronomy and Astrophysics en
dc.subject Gamma rays: atmospheric Cherenkov technique en
dc.subject Methods: data analysis en
dc.subject Telescopes: HAGAR en
dc.title Observations with the High Altitude GAmma Ray (HAGAR) telescope array in the Indian Himalayas en
dc.type Article en


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