522 research outputs found
The Study of TeV Variability and Duty Cycle of Mrk 421 from 3 Years of Observations with the Milagro Observatory
TeV flaring activity with time scales as short as tens of minutes and an
orphan TeV flare have been observed from the blazar Markarian 421 (Mrk 421).
The TeV emission from Mrk 421 is believed to be produced by leptonic
synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) emission. In this scenario, correlations between
the X-ray and the TeV fluxes are expected, TeV orphan flares are hardly
explained and the activity (measured as duty cycle) of the source at TeV
energies is expected to be equal or less than that observed in X-rays if only
SSC is considered. To estimate the TeV duty cycle of Mrk 421 and to establish
limits on its variability at different time scales, we continuously observed
Mrk 421 with the Milagro observatory. Mrk 421 was detected by Milagro with a
statistical significance of 7.1 standard deviations between 2005 September 21
and 2008 March 15. The observed spectrum is consistent with previous
observations by VERITAS. We estimate the duty cycle of Mrk 421 for energies
above 1 TeV for different hypothesis of the baseline flux and for different
flare selections and we compare our results with the X-ray duty cycle estimated
by Resconi et al. 2009. The robustness of the results is discussed.Comment: 27 pages, 6 figures, ApJ accepte
Can Fireball or Firecone Models Explain Gamma Ray Bursts?
The observed afterglows of gamma ray bursts, in particular that of GRB 970228
six months later, seem to rule out relativistic fireballs and relativistic
firecones driven by merger or accretion induced collapse of compact stellar
objects in galaxies as the origin of GRBs. GRBs can be produced by superluminal
jets from such events.Comment: A short summary of the main properties of GRBs which are produced by
relativistic jets from merger/AIC of compact stellar objects is included.
Additional references to very recent publication
Spectrum and Morphology of the Two Brightest Milagro Sources in the Cygnus Region: MGRO J2019+37 and MGRO J2031+41
The Cygnus region is a very bright and complex portion of the TeV sky, host
to unidentified sources and a diffuse excess with respect to conventional
cosmic-ray propagation models. Two of the brightest TeV sources, MGRO J2019+37
and MGRO J2031+41, are analyzed using Milagro data with a new technique, and
their emission is tested under two different spectral assumptions: a power law
and a power law with an exponential cutoff. The new analysis technique is based
on an energy estimator that uses the fraction of photomultiplier tubes in the
observatory that detect the extensive air shower. The photon spectrum is
measured in the range 1 to 200 TeV using the last 3 years of Milagro data
(2005-2008), with the detector in its final configuration. MGRO J2019+37 is
detected with a significance of 12.3 standard deviations (), and is
better fit by a power law with an exponential cutoff than by a simple power
law, with a probability % (F-test). The best-fitting parameters for the
power law with exponential cutoff model are a normalization at 10 TeV of
, a spectral
index of and a cutoff energy of TeV. MGRO
J2031+41 is detected with a significance of 7.3, with no evidence of a
cutoff. The best-fitting parameters for a power law are a normalization of
and a
spectral index of . The overall flux is subject to an
30% systematic uncertainty. The systematic uncertainty on the power law
indices is 0.1. A comparison with previous results from TeV J2032+4130,
MGRO J2031+41 and MGRO J2019+37 is also presented.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure
Evidence for TeV Emission from GRB 970417a
Milagrito, a detector sensitive to very high energy gamma rays, monitored the
northern sky from February 1997 through May 1998. With a large field of view
and a high duty cycle, this instrument was well suited to perform a search for
TeV gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). We report on a search made for TeV counterparts to
GRBs observed by BATSE. BATSE detected 54 GRBs within the field of view of
Milagrito during this period. An excess of events coincident in time and space
with one of these bursts, GRB 970417a, was observed by Milagrito. The excess
has a chance probability of of being a fluctuation of the
background. The probability for observing an excess at least this large from
any of the 54 bursts is . No significant correlations were
detected from the other bursts.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Gamma-Ray Bursts: Progress, Problems & Prospects
The cosmological gamma-ray burst (GRB) phenomenon is reviewed. The broad
observational facts and empirical phenomenological relations of the GRB prompt
emission and afterglow are outlined. A well-tested, successful fireball shock
model is introduced in a pedagogical manner. Several important uncertainties in
the current understanding of the phenomenon are reviewed, and prospects of how
future experiments and extensive observational and theoretical efforts may
address these problems are discussed.Comment: 86 pages, 17 figures, 566 references, an invited review for
International Journal of Modern Physics A, in pres
Calibration of the Milagro Cosmic Ray Telescope
The Milagro detector is an air shower array which uses the water Cherenkov
technique and is capable of continuously monitoring the sky at energies near 1
TeV. The detector consists of 20000 metric tons of pure water instrumented with
723 photo-multiplier tubes (PMTs). The PMTs are arranged in a two-layer
structure on a lattice of 3 m spacing covering 5000 area. The direction
of the shower is determined from the relative timing of the PMT signals,
necessitating a common time reference and amplitude slewing corrections to
improve the time resolution. The calibration system to provide these consists
of a pulsed laser driving 30 diffusing light sources deployed in the pond to
allow cross-calibration of the PMTs. The system is capable of calibrating times
and the pulse-heights from the PMTs using the time-over-threshold technique.
The absolute energy scale is provided using single muons passing through the
detector. The description of the calibration system of the Milagro detector and
its prototype Milagrito will be presented.Comment: 4 pages, submitted to the XXVI International Cosmic Ray Conferenc
First results of a study of TeV emission from GRBs in Milagrito
Milagrito, a detector sensitive to Îł-rays at TeV energies, monitored the northern sky during the period February 1997 through May 1998. With a large field of view and high duty cycle, this instrument was used to perform a search for TeV counterparts to Îł-ray bursts. Within the Milagrito field of view 54 Îł-ray bursts at keV energies were observed by the Burst And Transient Satellite Experiment (BATSE) aboard the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory. This paper describes the results of a preliminary analysis to search for TeV emission correlated with BATSE detected bursts. Milagrito detected an excess of events coincident both spatially and temporally with GRB 970417a, with chance probability 2.8Ă10â5 within the BATSE error radius. No other significant correlations were detected. Since 54 bursts were examined the chance probability of observing an excess with this significance in any of these bursts is 1.5Ă10â3. The statistical aspects and physical implications of this result are discussed
Search for Short Duration Bursts of TeV Gamma Rays with the Milagrito Telescope
The Milagrito water Cherenkov telescope operated for over a year. The most
probable gamma-ray energy was ~1 TeV and the trigger rate was as high as 400
Hz. We have developed an efficient technique for searching the entire sky for
short duration bursts of TeV photons. Such bursts may result from "traditional"
gamma-ray bursts that were not in the field-of-view of any other instruments,
the evaporation of primordial black holes, or some as yet undiscovered
phenomenon. We have begun to search the Milagrito data set for bursts of
duration 10 seconds. Here we will present the technique and the expected
results. Final results will be presented at the conference.Comment: submitted to XXVI International Cosmic Ray Conference, Salt Lake Cit
- âŠ