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The Cangaroo-III Project

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 Added by Masaki Mori
 Publication date 1999
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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The CANGAROO-III project,which consists of an array of four 10 m imaging Cherenkov telescopes,has just started being constructed in Woomera, South Australia,in a collaboration between Australia and Japan. The first stereoscopic observation of celestial high-energy gamma-rays in the 100 GeV region with two telescopes will start in 2002,and the four telescope array will be completed in 2004. The concept of the project and the expected performance are discussed.



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We report on the status of the construction of an array of four 10 m atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes for gamma-ray astronomy, near Woomera, in South Australia -- the CANGAROO-III project. The first telescope of this array is the upgraded version of the CANGAROO-II 7 m telescope and has been in operation since March 2000. The second telescope, an improved version of the first, is being constructed for installation in late 2001. Stereoscopic observation of sub TeV gamma-rays with the two 10 m telescopes will begin in 2002 and the full array will be operational in 2004.
100 - S.Kabuki , K.Tsuchiya , K.Okumura 2002
A Cherenkov imaging camera for the CANGAROO-III experiment has been developed for observations of gamma-ray induced air-showers at energies from 10$^{11}$ to 10$^{14}$ eV. The camera consists of 427 pixels, arranged in a hexagonal shape at 0.17$^circ$ intervals, each of which is a 3/4-inch diameter photomultiplier module with a Winston-cone--shaped light guide. The camera was designed to have a large dynamic range of signal linearity, a wider field of view, and an improvement in photon collection efficiency compared with the CANGAROO-II camera. The camera, and a number of the calibration experiments made to test its performance, are described in detail in this paper.
We previously proposed that Betelgeuse might have been spun up by accreting a companion of about 1 solar mass. Here we explore in more detail the possible systematics of such a merger and a larger range of accreted masses. We use the stellar evolutionary code MESA to add angular momentum to a primary star in core helium burning, core carbon burning, or shell carbon burning. Our models provide a reasonable natural explanation for why Betelgeuse has a large, but sub-Keplerian equatorial velocity. They eject sufficient mass and angular momentum in rotationally-induced mass loss to reproduce the observed ratio of the equatorial velocity to escape velocity of Betelgeuse, ~0.23, within a factor of three nearly independent of the primary mass, the secondary mass, and the epoch at which merger occurs. Our models suggest that merger of a primary of somewhat less than 15 solar masses with secondaries of from 1 to 10 solar masses during core helium burning or core carbon burning could yield the equatorial rotational velocity of ~15 km/s attributed to Betelgeuse. For accreting models, a wave of angular momentum is halted at the composition boundary at the edge of the helium core. The inner core is thus not affected by the accretion of the companion in these simulations. Accretion has relatively little effect on the production of magnetic fields in the inner core. Our results do not prove, but do not negate that Betelgeuse might have ingested a companion of several solar masses.
Because accretion and merger shocks in clusters of galaxies may accelerate particles to high energies, clusters are candidate sites for the origin of ultra-high-energy (UHE) cosmic-rays. A prediction was presented for gamma-ray emission from a cluster of galaxies at a detectable level with the current generation of imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes. The gamma-ray emission was produced via inverse Compton upscattering of cosmic microwave background (CMB) photons by electron-positron pairs generated by collisions of UHE cosmic rays in the cluster. We observed two clusters of galaxies, Abell 3667 and Abell 4038, searching for very-high-energy gamma-ray emission with the CANGAROO-III atmospheric Cherenkov telescope system in 2006. The analysis showed no significant excess around these clusters, yielding upper limits on the gamma-ray emission. From a comparison of the upper limit for the north-west radio relic region of Abell 3667 with a model prediction, we derive a lower limit for the magnetic field of the region of ~0.1 micro G. This shows the potential of gamma-ray observations in studies of the cluster environment. We also discuss the flux upper limit from cluster center regions using a model of gamma-ray emission from neutral pions produced in hadronic collisions of cosmic-ray protons with the intra-cluster medium (ICM). The derived upper limit of the cosmic-ray energy density within this framework is an order of magnitude higher than that of our Galaxy.
237 - R.Enomoto , J.Kushida , T.Nakamori 2009
Observation by the CANGAROO-III stereoscopic system of the Imaging Cherenkov Telescope has detected extended emission of TeV gamma rays in the vicinity of the pulsar PSR B1706$-$44. The strength of the signal observed as gamma-ray-like events varies when we apply different ways of emulating background events. The reason for such uncertainties is argued in relevance to gamma-rays embedded in the off-source data, that is, unknown sources and diffuse emission in the Galactic plane, namely, the existence of a complex structure of TeV gamma-ray emission around PSR B1706$-$44.
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