3,557 research outputs found

    Penggunaan Media Gambar Untuk Meningkatkan Hasil Belajarah IPS Materi Peninggalan Bangunan Bersejarah Pada Siswa Kelas IV SDN Marga Mulya Kec. Bungku Barat Kab. Morowali

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    Permasalahan utama dalam penelitian ini adalah rendahnya hasil belajar IPS Kelas IV SDN Marga Mulya, terutama yang berkaitan dengan Peninggalan Bangunan Bersejarah. Salah satu penyebab rendanya hasil belajar tersebut adalah siswa terbiasa belajar dengan cara menghafal, diceramahi, dan menyalin. Penggunaan Media Gambar pada penelitian ini difokuskan pada permasalahan yaitu “Bagaimana cara meningkatkan hasil belajar siswa pada materi Peninggalan Bangunan Bersejarah Kelas IV SDN Marga Mulya?” Untuk menjawab permasalahan diatas peneliti melakukan Penelitian Tindakan Kelas (PTK). Hasil penelitian menunjukkan bahwa pada tindakan siklus I terdapat 18 orang siswa yang tuntas secara individu dari 23 siswa sehingga persentasi ketuntasan klasikal 78,26% dan daya serap klasikal sebesar 74,34% sedangkan hasil observasi siswa 80,55% dan observasi guru 61,36% dengan kategori cukup. Pada tindakan siklus II terdapat 22 siswa yang tuntas secara individu sehingga persentase ketuntasan klasikal 95,65% dan daya serap klasikal 85,65% sedangkan hasil observasi siswa 88,88% dan hasi observasi guru 70,45% dengan ketegori sangat baik. Hal ini berarti pembelajaran pada siklus II telah memenuhi indikator keberhasilan dengan daya serap klasikal 85,65% dan ketuntasan belajar klasikal minimal 95,65%. Berdasarkan daya serap klasikal dan ketuntasan belajar klasikal pada kegiatan pembelajaran siklus II. Dari penelitian ini dapat disimpulkan bahwa perbaikan pembelajaran dengan menggunakan media gambar dapat meningkatkan hasil belajar siswa pada mata pelajaran IPS di Kelas IV SDN Marga Mulya

    VERITAS Observations of the BL Lac Object 1ES 1218+304

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    The VERITAS collaboration reports the detection of very-high-energy (VHE) gamma-ray emission from the high-frequency-peaked BL Lac object 1ES 1218+304 located at a redshift of z=0.182. A gamma-ray signal was detected with high statistical significance for the observations taken during several months in the 2006-2007 observing season. The photon spectrum between ~160 GeV and ~1.8 TeV is well described by a power law with an index of Gamma = 3.08 +/- 0.34(stat) +/- 0.2(sys). The integral flux above 200 GeV corresponds to ~6% of that of the Crab Nebula. The light curve does not show any evidence for VHE flux variability. Using lower limits on the density of the extragalactic background light (EBL) in the near-IR to mid-IR we are able to limit the range of intrinsic energy spectra for 1ES 1218+304. We show that the intrinsic photon spectrum is harder than a power law with an index of Gamma = 2.32 +/- 0.37. When including constraints from the spectra of 1ES 1101-232 and 1ES 0229+200, the spectrum of 1ES 1218+304 is likely to be harder than Gamma = 1.86 +/- 0.37.Comment: Submitted to Proceedings of "4th Heidelberg International Symposium on High Energy Gamma-Ray Astronomy 2008

    The Sensitivity of HAWC to High-Mass Dark Matter Annihilations

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    The High Altitude Water Cherenkov (HAWC) observatory is a wide field-of-view detector sensitive to gamma rays of 100 GeV to a few hundred TeV. Located in central Mexico at 19 degrees North latitude and 4100 m above sea level, HAWC will observe gamma rays and cosmic rays with an array of water Cherenkov detectors. The full HAWC array is scheduled to be operational in Spring 2015. In this paper, we study the HAWC sensitivity to the gamma-ray signatures of high-mass (multi- TeV) dark matter annihilation. The HAWC observatory will be sensitive to diverse searches for dark matter annihilation, including annihilation from extended dark matter sources, the diffuse gamma-ray emission from dark matter annihilation, and gamma-ray emission from non-luminous dark matter subhalos. Here we consider the HAWC sensitivity to a subset of these sources, including dwarf galaxies, the M31 galaxy, the Virgo cluster, and the Galactic center. We simulate the HAWC response to gamma rays from these sources in several well-motivated dark matter annihilation channels. If no gamma-ray excess is observed, we show the limits HAWC can place on the dark matter cross-section from these sources. In particular, in the case of dark matter annihilation into gauge bosons, HAWC will be able to detect a narrow range of dark matter masses to cross-sections below thermal. HAWC should also be sensitive to non-thermal cross-sections for masses up to nearly 1000 TeV. The constraints placed by HAWC on the dark matter cross-section from known sources should be competitive with current limits in the mass range where HAWC has similar sensitivity. HAWC can additionally explore higher dark matter masses than are currently constrained.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, version to be published in PR

    Status of the VERITAS Observatory

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    VERITAS, an Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescope (IACT) system for gammma-ray astronomy in the GeV-TeV range, has recently completed its first season of observations with a full array of four telescopes. A number of astrophysical gamma-ray sources have been detected, both galactic and extragalactic, including sources previously unknown at TeV energies. We describe the status of the array and some highlight results, and assess the technical performance, sensitivity and shower reconstruction capabilities.Comment: Submitted to Proceedings of "4th Heidelberg International Symposium on High Energy Gamma-Ray Astronomy 2008

    The First VERITAS Telescope

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    The first atmospheric Cherenkov telescope of VERITAS (the Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array System) has been in operation since February 2005. We present here a technical description of the instrument and a summary of its performance. The calibration methods are described, along with the results of Monte Carlo simulations of the telescope and comparisons between real and simulated data. The analysis of TeV γ\gamma-ray observations of the Crab Nebula, including the reconstructed energy spectrum, is shown to give results consistent with earlier measurements. The telescope is operating as expected and has met or exceeded all design specifications.Comment: Accepted by Astroparticle Physic

    Discovery of Very High-Energy Gamma-Ray Radiation from the BL Lac 1ES 0806+524

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    The high-frequency-peaked BL-Lacertae object \objectname{1ES 0806+524}, at redshift z=0.138, was observed in the very-high-energy (VHE) gamma-ray regime by VERITAS between November 2006 and April 2008. These data encompass the two-, and three-telescope commissioning phases, as well as observations with the full four-telescope array. \objectname{1ES 0806+524} is detected with a statistical significance of 6.3 standard deviations from 245 excess events. Little or no measurable variability on monthly time scales is found. The photon spectrum for the period November 2007 to April 2008 can be characterized by a power law with photon index 3.6±1.0stat±0.3sys3.6 \pm 1.0_{\mathrm{stat}} \pm 0.3_{\mathrm{sys}} between \sim300 GeV and \sim700 GeV. The integral flux above 300 GeV is (2.2±0.5stat±0.4sys)×1012cm2s1(2.2\pm0.5_{\mathrm{stat}}\pm0.4_{\mathrm{sys}})\times10^{-12}\:\mathrm{cm}^{2}\:\mathrm{s}^{-1} which corresponds to 1.8% of the Crab Nebula flux. Non contemporaneous multiwavelength observations are combined with the VHE data to produce a broadband spectral energy distribution that can be reasonably described using a synchrotron-self Compton model.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, accepted to APJ

    A connection between star formation activity and cosmic rays in the starburst galaxy M 82

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    Although Galactic cosmic rays (protons and nuclei) are widely believed to be dominantly accelerated by the winds and supernovae of massive stars, definitive evidence of this origin remains elusive nearly a century after their discovery [1]. The active regions of starburst galaxies have exceptionally high rates of star formation, and their large size, more than 50 times the diameter of similar Galactic regions, uniquely enables reliable calorimetric measurements of their potentially high cosmic-ray density [2]. The cosmic rays produced in the formation, life, and death of their massive stars are expected to eventually produce diffuse gamma-ray emission via their interactions with interstellar gas and radiation. M 82, the prototype small starburst galaxy, is predicted to be the brightest starburst galaxy in gamma rays [3, 4]. Here we report the detection of >700 GeV gamma rays from M 82. From these data we determine a cosmic-ray density of 250 eV cm-3 in the starburst core of M 82, or about 500 times the average Galactic density. This result strongly supports that cosmic-ray acceleration is tied to star formation activity, and that supernovae and massive-star winds are the dominant accelerators.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures; published in Nature; Version is prior to Nature's in-house style editing (differences are minimal
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