T. Hassan
Complutense University of Madrid
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Featured researches published by T. Hassan.
Astroparticle Physics | 2013
M. Doro; J. Conrad; D. Emmanoulopoulos; Sanchez-Conde; J. A. Barrio; E. Birsin; J. Bolmont; P. Brun; S. Colafrancesco; Simon Henry Connell; J. L. Contreras; M. K. Daniel; M. Fornasa; M. Gaug; J. F. Glicenstein; A. Gonzalez-Munoz; T. Hassan; D. Horns; A. Jacholkowska; C. Jahn; R Mazini; Nestor Rafael Mirabal; A. Moralejo; E. Moulin; D. Nieto; J. Ripken; Heidi Sandaker; U. Schwanke; G. Spengler; A. Stamerra
Abstract The Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) is a project for a next-generation observatory for very high energy (GeV–TeV) ground-based gamma-ray astronomy, currently in its design phase, and foreseen to be operative a few years from now. Several tens of telescopes of 2–3 different sizes, distributed over a large area, will allow for a sensitivity about a factor 10 better than current instruments such as H.E.S.S, MAGIC and VERITAS, an energy coverage from a few tens of GeV to several tens of TeV, and a field of view of up to 10°. In the following study, we investigate the prospects for CTA to study several science questions that can profoundly influence our current knowledge of fundamental physics. Based on conservative assumptions for the performance of the different CTA telescope configurations currently under discussion, we employ a Monte Carlo based approach to evaluate the prospects for detection and characterisation of new physics with the array. First, we discuss CTA prospects for cold dark matter searches, following different observational strategies: in dwarf satellite galaxies of the Milky Way, which are virtually void of astrophysical background and have a relatively well known dark matter density; in the region close to the Galactic Centre, where the dark matter density is expected to be large while the astrophysical background due to the Galactic Centre can be excluded; and in clusters of galaxies, where the intrinsic flux may be boosted significantly by the large number of halo substructures. The possible search for spatial signatures, facilitated by the larger field of view of CTA, is also discussed. Next we consider searches for axion-like particles which, besides being possible candidates for dark matter may also explain the unexpectedly low absorption by extragalactic background light of gamma-rays from very distant blazars. We establish the axion mass range CTA could probe through observation of long-lasting flares in distant sources. Simulated light-curves of flaring sources are also used to determine the sensitivity to violations of Lorentz invariance by detection of the possible delay between the arrival times of photons at different energies. Finally, we mention searches for other exotic physics with CTA.
Astroparticle Physics | 2013
G. Dubus; J. L. Contreras; S. Funk; Y. A. Gallant; T. Hassan; J. A. Hinton; Yoshiyuki Inoue; J. Knödlseder; P. Martin; Nestor Rafael Mirabal; M. de Naurois; M. Renaud
Surveys open up unbiased discovery space and generate legacy datasets of long-lasting value. One of the goals of imaging arrays of Cherenkov telescopes like CTA is to survey areas of the sky for faint very high energy gamma-ray (VHE) sources, especially sources that would not have drawn attention were it not for their VHE emission (e.g . the Galactic “dark accelerators”). More than half the currently known VHE sources are to be found in the Galactic Plane. Using standard techniques, CTA can carry out a survey of the region |l|<60° |b|<2° in 250 h (1/4th the available time per year at one location) down to a uniform sensitivity of 3 mCrab (a “Galactic Plane survey”). CTA could also survey 1/4th of the sky down to a sensitivity of 20 mCrab in 370 h of observing time (an “all-sky survey”), which complements well the surveys by the Fermi/LAT at lower energies and extended air shower arrays at higher energies. Observations in (non-standard) divergent pointing mode may shorten the “all-sky survey” time to about 100 h with no loss in survey sensitivity. We present the scientific rationale for these surveys, their place in the multi-wavelength context, their possible impact and their feasibility. We find that the Galactic Plane survey has the potential to detect hundreds of sources. Implementing such a survey should be a major goal of CTA. Additionally, about a dozen blazars, or counterparts to Fermi/LAT sources, are expected to be detected by the all-sky survey, whose prime motivation is the search for extragalactic “dark accelerators”.
Astroparticle Physics | 2013
H. Sol; A. Zech; C. Boisson; U. Barres de Almeida; J. Biteau; J. L. Contreras; B. Giebels; T. Hassan; Y. Inoue; K. Katarzynski; H. Krawczynski; Nestor Rafael Mirabal; Juri Poutanen; F. Rieger; Tomonori Totani; W. Benbow; M. Cerruti; M. Errando; Lisa Fallon; E. M. de Gouveia Dal Pino; J. A. Hinton; Susumu Inoue; J.-P. Lenain; A. Neronov; Keitaro Takahashi; H. Takami; R. White
Abstract Active Galactic Nuclei (hereafter AGN) produce powerful outflows which offer excellent conditions for efficient particle acceleration in internal and external shocks, turbulence, and magnetic reconnection events. The jets as well as particle accelerating regions close to the supermassive black holes (hereafter SMBH) at the intersection of plasma inflows and outflows, can produce readily detectable very high energy gamma-ray emission. As of now, more than 45 AGN including 41 blazars and 4 radiogalaxies have been detected by the present ground-based gamma-ray telescopes, which represents more than one third of the cosmic sources detected so far in the VHE gamma-ray regime. The future Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) should boost the sample of AGN detected in the VHE range by about one order of magnitude, shedding new light on AGN population studies, and AGN classification and unification schemes. CTA will be a unique tool to scrutinize the extreme high-energy tail of accelerated particles in SMBH environments, to revisit the central engines and their associated relativistic jets, and to study the particle acceleration and emission mechanisms, particularly exploring the missing link between accretion physics, SMBH magnetospheres and jet formation. Monitoring of distant AGN will be an extremely rewarding observing program which will inform us about the inner workings and evolution of AGN. Furthermore these AGN are bright beacons of gamma-rays which will allow us to constrain the extragalactic infrared and optical backgrounds as well as the intergalactic magnetic field, and will enable tests of quantum gravity and other “exotic” phenomena.
Astroparticle Physics | 2013
Emma de Ona Wilhelmi; B. Rudak; J. A. Barrio; J. L. Contreras; Y. A. Gallant; D. Hadasch; T. Hassan; M. López; D. Mazin; Nestor Rafael Mirabal; G. Pedaletti; M. Renaud; R. de los Reyes; D. F. Torres
Abstract The last few years have seen a revolution in very-high γ -ray astronomy (VHE; Exa0>xa0100xa0GeV) driven largely by a new generation of Cherenkov telescopes (namely the H.E.S.S. telescope array, the MAGIC and MAGIC-II large telescopes and the VERITAS telescope array). The Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) project foresees a factor of 5 to 10 improvement in sensitivity above 0.1xa0TeV, extending the accessible energy range to higher energies up to 100xa0TeV, in the Galactic cut-off regime, and down to a few tens GeV, covering the VHE photon spectrum with good energy and angular resolution. As a result of the fast development of the VHE field, the number of pulsar wind nebulae (PWNe) detected has increased from one PWN in the early ’90s to more than two dozen firm candidates today. Also, the low energy threshold achieved and good sensitivity at TeV energies has resulted in the detection of pulsed emission from the Crab Pulsar (or its close environment) opening new and exiting expectations about the pulsed spectra of the high energy pulsars powering PWNe. Here we discuss the physics goals we aim to achieve with CTA on pulsar and PWNe physics evaluating the response of the instrument for different configurations.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013
T. Hassan; Nestor Rafael Mirabal; J. L. Contreras; I. Oya
The authors acknowledge the support of the Spanish MINECO under project FPA2010-22056-C06-06 and the German Ministry for Education and Research (BMBF). N.M. acknowledges support from the Spanish government. through a Ram´on y Cajal fellowship. We also thank the referee for useful suggestions and comments on the manuscript.
Proceedings of 35th International Cosmic Ray Conference — PoS(ICRC2017) | 2017
T. Hassan; Alberto Domínguez; J. Lefaucheur; D. Mazin; S. Pita; Andreas Zech
The Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) is the next generation ground-based
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2017
C. Deil; C. Boisson; K. Kosack; Jeremy S. Perkins; J. King; P. Eger; Michael Mayer; Matt A. Wood; V. Zabalza; Jurgen Knodlseder; T. Hassan; L. Mohrmann; Alexander Ziegler; B. Khélifi; D. Dorner; Gernot Maier; G. Pedaletti; J. Rosado; J. L. Contreras; J. Lefaucheur; Kai Brügge; Mathieu Servillat; R. Terrier; Roland Walter; S. Lombardi
gamma
arXiv: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena | 2012
T. Hassan; S. Bonnefoy; M. López; Nestor Rafael Mirabal; J. A. Barrio; J. L. Contreras; B. Rudak; Emma de Ona Wilhelmi; Raquel de los Reyes
-ray observatory. It will provide an order of magnitude better sensitivity and an extended energy coverage, 20 GeV - 300 TeV, relative to current Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescopes (IACTs). IACTs, despite featuring an excellent sensitivity, are characterized by a limited field of view that makes the blind search of new sources very time inefficient. Fortunately, the
arXiv: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena | 2011
T. Hassan; Nestor Rafael Mirabal; J. L. Contreras
textit{Fermi}