Astroparticle physics with high-energy photons II – Techniques & Instruments Alessandro de Angelis Lisboa 2006 http://www.fisica.uniud.it/~deangeli The subject of these lectures… (definition of terms) Detection of high-energy photons from space High-E X/g: probably the most interesting part of the spectrum for astroparticle 2 Point directly to the source Nonthermal above 30 keV What are X and gamma rays ? Arbitrary ! (Weekles 1988) X X/low E g 1 keV-1 MeV 1 MeV-10 Me medium 10-30 MeV HE 30 MeV-30 GeV VHE 30 GeV-30 TeV UHE 30 TeV-30 PeV EHE above 30 PeV No upper limit, apart from low flux (at 30 PeV, we expect ~ 1 g/km2/day) 3 Outline of these lectures 0) Introduction & definition of terms 1) Motivations for the study high-energy photons 2) Historical milestones for observations 3) X/g detection and some of the present & past detectors 4) Future detectors Detection of a high E photon Above the UV and below “50 GeV”, shielding from the atmosphere Below the e+e- threshold + some phase space (“10 MeV”), Compton/scintillation Above “10 MeV”, pair production Above “50 GeV”, atmospheric showers Pair <-> Brem 4 5 The problem - I The problem – II : the opacity of the atmosphere 6 Consequences on the techniques The earth atmosphere (28 X0 at sea level) is opaque to X/g => only satbased detectors can detect primary X/g The fluxes of h.e. g are low and decrease rapidly with energy Vela, the strongest g source in the sky, has a flux above 100 MeV of 1.3 10-5 photons/(cm2s), falling with E-1.89 => a 1m2 detector would detect only 1 photon/2h above 10 GeV => with the present space technology, VHE and UHE gammas can be detected only from atmospheric showers Earth-based detectors, atmospheric shower satellites The flux from high energy cosmic rays is much larger 7 Satellite-based and atmospheric: complementary, w/ moving boundaries Atmospheric Flux of diffuse extra-galactic photons Sat 8 Ground-based vs Satellite Satellite: primary detection small effective area ~1m2 lower sensitivity large duty-cycle large cost lower energy low bkg Ground based secondary detection huge effective area ~104 m2 Higher sensitivity small angular opening small duty-cycle low cost high energy high bkg 9 Satellite-based detectors: figures of merit Effective area, or equivalent area for the detection of g Aeff(E) = A x eff. Angular resolution, important for identifying the g sources and for reducing the diffuse background Energy resolution Time resolution 10 11 X detectors The electrons ejected or created by the incident gamma rays lose energy mainly in ionizing the surrounding atoms; secondary electrons may in turn ionize the material, producing an amplification effect Most space X- ray telescopes consist of detection materials which take advantage of ionization process but the way to measure the total ionization loss differ with the nature of the material Commonly used detection devices are... gas detectors scintillation counters semiconductor detectors 12 X detection (direction-sensitive) X detection (direction-sensitive) 13 Unfolding is a nice mathematical problem ! 14 INTEGRAL/CHANDRA INTEGRAL, the International Gamma-Ray Astrophysics Laboratory is an ESA medium-size (M2) science mission Energy range 15 keV to 10 MeV plus simultaneous X-ray (3-35 keV) and optical (550 nm) monitoring Fine spectroscopy (DE/E ~ 1%) and fine imaging (angular resolution of 5') Two main -ray instruments: SPI (spectroscopy) and IBIS (imager) Chandra, from NASA, has a similar performance 15 SWIFT (launched Dec 2004) Instruments Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) X-Ray Telescope (XRT) New CdZnTe detectors Most sensitive imager <~ 150 keV ever Arcsecond GRB positions CCD spectroscopy UV/Optical Telescope (UVOT) Sub-arcsec positions Grism spectroscopy 24th mag sensitivity (1000 sec) Finding chart for other observers UVOT BAT BAT XRT UVOT XRT Spacecraft g satellite-based detectors: engineering Techniques taken from particle physics g direction is mostly determined by e+e- 16 conversion Veto against charged particles by an ACD Angular resolution given by Opening angle of the pair m/E ln(E/m) Multiple scattering (20/pb) (L/X0)1/2 (dominant) => large number of thin converters, but the # of channel increases (power consumption << 1 kW) If possible, a calorimeter in the bottom to get E resolution, but watch the weight (leakage => deteriorated resolution) Smart techniques to measure E w/o calorimeters (AGILE) 17 g detectors on satellite: comparison with X-ray detectors X-ray Telescope Detection technology Sensitivity Angular resolution No. of Sources detected Gamma-ray CCD, Ge e+e- pair creation tracking a few micro-Crab ~ ten milli-Crab < 1 arc-second <1 degree >>106 ~300 18 EGRET High Energy g detector 20 MeV-10 GeV on the CGRO (19912000) thin tantalium plates with wire chambers Scintillators for trigger Energy measured by a NaI (Tl) calorimeter 8 X0 thick Effective area ~ 0.15 m2 @ 1 GeV Angular resolution ~ 1.2 deg @ 1 GeV Energy resolution ~20% @ 1 GeV Scientific success Increased number of identified sources, AGN, GRB, sun flares... 19 Near future: the GLAST observatory and the LAT Gamma Ray Burst Monitor (GBM) Spacecraft Rocket Launch base Launch date Orbit Delta II Kennedy Space Center August 2007 575 km (T ~ 95 min) Large Area Telescope (LAT) Heart of the instrument is the LAT, detecting camma conversions g ACD TRACKER LAT Mass Power 3000 Kg 650 W International collaboration USA-Italy-France-Japan-Sweden e+ e– CAL 20 LAT overview Si-strip Tracker (TKR) 18 planes XY ~ 1.7 x 1.7 m2 w/ converter Single-sided Si strips 228 mm pitch, ~106 channels Measurement of the gamma direction AntiCoincidence Detector (ACD) 89 scintillator tiles around the TKR Reduction of the background from charged particles g Astroparticle groups INFN/University Bari, Padova, Perugia, Pisa, Roma2, Udine/Trieste The Silicon tracker is mainly built in Italy Italy is also responsible for the detector simulation, event display and GRB physics e+ e- Calorimeter (CAL) Array of 1536 CsI(Tl) crystals in 8 layers Measurement of the electron energy 21 The GLAST LAT outperforms EGRET by two orders of magnitude 22 GLAST performance two examples of application Cosmic ray production Geminga Radio-Quiet Pulsars Facilitate searches for pulsations from millisecond pulsars Geminga Crab PKS 0528 +134 23 AGILE: the GLAST precursor L’uso della tecnologia del silicio per rivelare i gamma nasce con un rivelatore spaziale tutto italiano, AGILE Prima piccola missione scientifica dell’ASI Lancio previsto per la fine 2006 (vettore indiano) Anticoincidenza di scintillatore plastico • 12 piani di tracciatore di silicio, 10 con convertitore di tungsteno (0.07 X0) IASF-INAF Milano • Mini-Calorimetro (15+15 barre di CsI ~1.5 X0) IASF-INAF Roma • Rivelatore X (15-40 keV) a maschera codificata IASF-INAF Milano INFN Roma2 IASF-INAF Bologna Gruppi INFN di Trieste, Roma1, Roma2 e istituti IASF-INAF di Milano, Roma, Bologna 24 But despite the progress in satellites… The problem of the flux (~1 photon/day/km2 @ ~30 PeV) cannot be overcomed Photon concentrators work only at low energy The key for VHE gamma astronomy and above is in earth-based detectors Also for dark matter detection… Earth-based detectors Properties of Extensive Air Showers We believe we know well the g physics up to EHE… Predominant interactions e.m. e+e- pair production dominates electrons loose energy via brem Rossi approximation B is valid Maximum at z/X0 ln(E/e0); e0 is the critical energy ~80 MeV in air; X0 ~ 300 m at stp Cascades ~ a few km thick Lateral width dominated by Compton scattering ~ Moliere radius (~80m for air at STP) Note: lhad ~ 400 m for air => hadronic showers will look ~ equal to e.m., apart from having 20x more muons and being less regular 25 26 Ground detectors: EAS vs. IACT • EAS (Extensive Air Shower): detection of the charged particles in the shower • Cherenkov detectors: (IACT): detection of the Cherenkov light from charged particles in the atmospheric showers Extensive Air Shower Particle Detector Arrays Built to detect UHE gammas small flux => need for large surfaces, ~ 104 m2 Typical detectors are arrays of 50-1000 scintillators of ~1m2/each (fraction of sensitive area < 1%) Possibly a m detector for hadron rejection Direction from the arrival times, dq can be ~ 1 deg But: 100 TeV => 50,000 electrons & 250,000 photons at mountain altitudes, and sampling is possible calibrated from the shadow from the Moon Thresholds rather large, and dependent on the point of first interaction 27 EAS Particle Detector Arrays Principle Each module reports: Time of hit (10 ns accuracy) Number of particles crossing detector module Time sequence of hit detectors -> shower direction Radial distribution of particles -> distance L Total number of particles -> energy 28 29 Milagro Tibet III First Generation EAS Arrays 30 The Tibet Air Shower Array 4300m asl Scintillator array 497 detectors 0.5m2 each 5mm lead on each 5.3x104 m2 (phys. area) 680 Hz trigger rate 0.9o resolution 31 Milagro 2600m asl Water Cherenkov Detector 898 detectors 450(t)/273(b) in pond 175 water tanks 3.4x104 m2 (phys. area) 1700 Hz trigger rate 0.5o resolution 90% proton rejection 10 m 32 Gammas Protons Background Rejection in Milagro Retain 50% g and 9% protons Not angular resolution – inherent rejection Gamma MC Data Proton MC C NBottom( 2 Pes ) PEMax ( Bottom) 33 Sky Surveys Milagro sky map 34 Near future Instruments: ARGO-YBJ 35 ARGO-YBJ layout time resolution ~1 ns space resolution = strip 74 m 99 m Detector layout 10 Pads 8 Strips 1 CLUSTER = 12 RPC (56 x 62 cm2) (6.7 x 62 cm2) (43 m2) for each RPC for each Pad 78 m 111 m Layer (92% active surface) of Resistive Plate Chambers (RPC), 4300 m asl – high altitude 5800 m2 fully instrumented area 10,000 m2 total area dense sampling of shower 36 ARGO: Progress & Schedule 1800 m2 now acquiring data Physics runs since 2005 all 154 clusters complete in 2006 With g/hadron discrimination algorithms Without any g/hadron discrimination 37 Future:HAWC Build pond at extreme altitude (Tibet 4300m or Chile 5200m) Incorporate new design Optical isolation between PMTs Larger PMT spacing Deeper PMT depth (in top layer) e m g 4 meters 300 meters ~$20M for complete detector ~60x sensitivity of Milagro – instantaneous sensitivity of Whipple over 2 sr ~0.02 Crab/year Cherenkov (Č) detectors Cherenkov light from g showers Č light is produced by particles faster than light in air Limiting angle cos qc ~ 1/n qc ~ 1º at sea level, 1.3º at 8 km asl Threshold @ sea level : 21 MeV for e, 44 GeV for m Maximum of a 1 TeV g shower ~ 8 Km asl 200 photons/m2 in the visible Duration ~ a few ns Angular spread ~ 0.5º 38 39 Cherenkov detectors: principles of operation Cherenkov light detected using mirrors which concentrate the photons into fast PMs In the beginning, heliostats Problem: Signal A fluctuations ~ (AtW)1/2 => S/B1/2 (A/tW)1/2 Now, a 3rd generation night sky background Smaller integration times ~ns Improved PMs Large areas => Low threshold Multi-telescope Close the gap ~ 100 GeV between satellite-based & ground-based instruments 40 The “Big Four” MAGIC (Germany, Italy & Spain) 1: Autumn ‘03 236 m2 (2) VERITAS (USA,UK1…) 1: Oct ’03 4: 2005 100 m2 (7) Montosa Canyon, Arizona Roque de los Muchachos, Canary Islands HESS Windhoek, Namibia (Germany & France) 2: Sum ’02 4: Early ’04 100 m2 (16) CANGAROO III (Japan & Australia) 2: Dec. ’02, 3: Early ’04 57 m2 (4) Woomera, Australia 41 3rd Generation Telescopes Overlap of ‘Big4’ allows for ~continuous Observations for mid-latitude sources [ space for another two installations … ] Negotiations towards MoU to balance between competition and cooperation In 2004: # CANGAROO 4x 57 HESS 4x MAGIC 1x (2007) 2x VERITAS (2007) 2x 4x area m2 Camera pixels FOV deg arrangement 427 4 ~100m 107 960 5 ~120m 240 577 3.5 ~80m 110 499 3.5 ~80m 42 43 The MAGIC site La Palma, IAC 28° North, 18° West Telescopio Nazionale Galileo Grantecan MAGIC MAGIC and its Control House MAGIC Fast alert for GRB observation MAGIC • Mirror: 17 m diameter • 240 m2 Al panels + heating • 85%-90% reflectivity • Frame deformation Active Mirror Control • • • • Camera: 3.5° FOV 577 pixels Optical fibre readout 2 level trigger & 300 Mhz FADC system • Light carbon fiber tubes • Telescope: 65 tons • Positioning:22s 44 After upgrade of the45 optics in July 2004 the telescope is in its final shape Cycle1 DAQ finished (Feb2005-Apr2006) ~300Hz shower rates Eth ~40GeV 46 the Active Mirror Control laser beams Photo by R. Wagner Photograph of the 576-pixel imaging camera of MAGIC-I. In the central part one can see the 396 high resolution pixels of 0.1° size. Those are surrounded by 180 pixels of 0.2°. 47 Gamma / hadron separation h (m) Gamma shower 45 GeV gamma ( narrow, points to source ) Proton shower ( wide, points anywhere ) alpha m m 48 100 GeV proton 49 Timing information hadron gamma candidate muon Three events of different type showing the energy (left) and arrival times (right) 50 51 Size2energy conversion E in GeV 1000 100 10 2 3 4 5 log(size) size and energy are statistically correlated, as shown above (derived from Monte Carlo data). The relation is sensitive to the point spread function. Ground-based detectors Improvements in atmospheric Č Improving flux sensitivity Detect weaker sources, study larger sky regions S/B1/2 (A/tW)1/2 Smaller integration time Improve photon collection, improve quantum efficiency of PMs Use several telescopes Lowering the energy threshold Close the gap ~ 100 GeV between satellite-based & ground-based instruments 52 Major projects in atmospheric Č Aiming at improved flux sensitivity CANGAROO (past and future…) Australia; Japan is building new telescopes VERITAS (US, Arizona) 4 x Whipple-like 100 m2 telescopes in Arizona, > 2007? 53 54 HESS II 55 MAGIC-II (a clone) MAGIC-I MAGIC-II 56 IACTs vs. EAS High Sensitivity HESS, MAGIC, CANGAROO, VERITAS Large Aperture/High Duty Cycle Milagro, Tibet, ARGO, HAWC? Large Effective Area Excellent Background Rejection (>99%) Small Aperture Moderate Area/Large Area (HAWC) Good Background Rejection Large Aperture High Resolution Energy Spectra Studies of known sources Surveys of limited regions of sky Unbiased Sky Survey Extended sources Transients (GRB’s) Solar physics/space weather 57 The future is very near (<2008) Satellite-based: GLAST Improvement in air Cherenkov telescopes (2nd generation of the big ones) Flux sensitivity Better angular & time resolutions Lower energy thresholds Larger mirrors and higher quantum-efficiency detectors Improvement in EAS Particle Detector Arrays Higher altitude Increased sampling 58 Sensitivity 59 Long-term vision in 1991 120 x 3m-5mφ telescopes system Hamamatsu Flatpanel 1994 2004 60 Long-term vision by MAGIC 2005? 61 Long-term vision by HESS 2005? 62 Long-term vision by Milagro 2005? 63 EUSO The Earth atmosphere is the ideal detector for the Extreme Energy Cosmic Rays and the companion Cosmic Neutrinos. The new idea of EUSO is to watch the fluorescence produced by them from the top Explore new technologies before brute64 force? Fresnel optics at ground? >30GeV γ 1016-1020eV CR,γ Air fluorescence & Cherenkov R&D Proposal by Kifune, Shimizu & Teshima In 2001 A new fact: the cooperation towards a large telescope array (CTA) has started HESS/MAGIC agreement on May 4-5 Goal: present a proposal in December 06 Foreseen budget: ~ 150 MEUR Two installations: one in the N, the other in the S Participation from Cangaroo S/N ~ 2 Working groups already set up 65 66 Array layout: 2-3 Zones High-energy section ~0.05% area coverage Medium-energy section ~1% area coverage FoV increasing to 8-10 degr. in outer sections Low-energy section ~10% area coverage 70 m 250 m Eth ~ 10-20 GeV Eth ~ 50-100 GeV Eth ~ 1-2 TeV few 1000 m 67 Option: Mix of telescope types Not to scale ! 68 Modes of operation Deep wide-band mode: all telescopes track the same source Survey mode: staggered fields of view survey sky Search & monitoring mode: subclusters track different sources Narrow-band mode: halo telescopes accumulate highenergy data, core telescopes hunt pulsars … Not to scale ! Telescope structure Proven: MAGIC rapid-slewing 17 m dish Cost / Dish Area Proven: H.E.S.S. 12 m dish Camera cost dominates 0 10 m Dish cost dominates 20 m 30 m Dish size Construction started: H.E.S.S. II 28 m dish 69 70 Possible CTA sensitivity GLAST -11 10 Crab 2 E x F(>E) [TeV/cm s] E.F(>E) [TeV/cm2s] -12 10% Crab 10 MAGIC looks a bit optimistic 30 m stereo telescopes Konopelko Astropart.Phys. 24 (2005) 191 -13 10 20 wide-angle 10 m telescopes de la Calle Perez, Biller, astro-ph 0602284 H.E.S.S. Current Simulations 1% Crab -14 10 10 100 1000 E [GeV] 10 4 10 5 71 Summary High energy photons (often traveling through large distances) are a great probe of physics under extreme conditions Observation of X/g rays gives an exciting view of the HE universe Many sources, often unknown Handles for the study of new mechanisms No clear sources above ~ 50 TeV What better than a crash test to break a theory ? Do they exist or is this just a technological limit ? We just started… Present detectors: have observational capabilities to give SURPRISES ! New instruments in the pipeline But… technological breakthrough needed to avoid brute force from 2010 (and unemployement from 2015?) 72 Bibliography polywww.in2p3.fr/actualites/congres/cherenkov2005/ F. Aharonian, “Very High Energy Cosmic Gamma Radiation”, World Scientific 2004 C.M. Hoffman et al., Rev. Mod. Physics 71 (1999) 4