The High Energy Stereoscopic System (H.E.S.S.) phase I instrument was an
array of four 100m2 mirror area Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov
Telescopes (IACTs) that has very successfully mapped the sky at photon energies
above ∼100GeV. Recently, a 600m2 telescope was added to
the centre of the existing array, which can be operated either in standalone
mode or jointly with the four smaller telescopes. The large telescope lowers
the energy threshold for gamma-ray observations to several tens of GeV, making
the array sensitive at energies where the Fermi-LAT instrument runs out of
statistics. At the same time, the new telescope makes the H.E.S.S. phase II
instrument. This is the first hybrid IACT array, as it operates telescopes of
different size (and hence different trigger rates) and different field of view.
In this contribution we present results of H.E.S.S. phase II observations of
the Crab Nebula, compare them to earlier observations, and evaluate the
performance of the new instrument with Monte Carlo simulations.Comment: In Proceedings of the 34th International Cosmic Ray Conference
(ICRC2015), The Hague, The Netherland