GAW, Gamma Air Watch - A Large Field of View Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov
M.C. Maccarone, G. Agnetta, P. Assis, B. Biondo, P. Brogueira, O. Catalano, F. Celi, J. Costa, G. Cusumano, C. Delgado, G. Di Cocco, M.C. Espirito Santo, P. Galeotti, S. Giarrusso, A. La Barbera, G. La Rosa, A. Mangano, T. Mineo, M. Moles, M. Pimenta, F. Prada, F. Russo, B. Sacco, M.A. Sanchez, A. Segreto, B. Tome', A. de Ugarte Postigo, P. Vallania, C. Vigorito
Abstract
GAW, acronym for Gamma Air Watch, is a path-finder experiment to test the feasibility of a new generation of imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes that join high flux sensitivity with large field of view capability. GAW is conceived as an array of three identical imaging telescopes disposed at the vertexes of an equilateral triangle, about 80 m side. Two main features characterize GAW with respect to all the existing and presently planned ground-based Cherenkov telescopes. The first difference concerns the optics system: GAW uses a Fresnel refractive lens (2.13 m diameter) as light collector instead of classical reflective mirror. The second main difference is the detection working mode used: the detector at the focal surface operates in single photoelectron counting mode instead of the usual charge integration one. The GAW array is planned to be located at the Calar Alto Observatory site, Spain, 2150 m a.s.l. During its first phase, only 6x6 degrees of the focal plane detector will be implemented; moving it along the field of view, the sensitivity of the telescopes will be tested observing the Crab Nebula with on-axis and off-axis pointing up to 20 deg and with energy threshold of 300 GeV and energy peak of 700 GeV. As path-finder, GAW will also monitor the Very High Energy activity of some flaring Blazars as well as will follow-up GLAST detections at high energies. In a second phase, the focal plane will be enlarged to cover a field of view of 24 deg (full); pointing along different North-South directions, GAW would reach a survey of 360x60 degrees region of the sky. GAW is a collaboration effort of Research Institutes in Italy, Portugal and Spain.