| Press Images

A prototype of one of the four telescopes that will be part
of the VERITAS high energy gamma ray observatory in Arizona.
About a dozen University of Utah faculty members and students
are participating in the project.
To
download high-resolution click here:
Credit: Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory. |
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An artist's rendering of the four telescopes in the VERITAS
high energy gamma ray observatory in Arizona. Construction
of the observatory -- which involves University of Utah
physicists -- was announced Weds. March 17.
To download
high-resolution click here:
Credit: Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory.
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March 17, 2004 --
UNIVERSITY OF UTAH NEWS ADVISORY
About a dozen faculty members and students from
the University of Utah Dept. of Physics are involved in VERITAS,
a $13.1 million gamma ray observatory to be built in Arizona.
The observatory will be an array of dish-shaped telescopes designed
to observe extremely violent events in the universe that generate
high-energy gamma rays.
A news release announcing construction of VERITAS was issued today
by the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory and the National
Science Foundation. A copy of the release is below.
The University of Utah's VERITAS team is headed by David Kieda,
a professor of physics.
Other members of the University of Utah VERITAS team are Paolo
Gondolo, an assistant professor of physics; Robert Atkins, a postdoctoral
researcher; graduate students Gary Walker, Tomo Nagai and Jeter
Hall; undergraduate students Dan Allen, Mike Snure, Josh Kagele,
Gary Finnegan and Chris Ballard; and Emily Toone, an 11th-grade
student at Bountiful High School.
VERITAS MOVES AHEAD
Mount Hopkins, Ariz. -- The Smithsonian Astrophysical
Observatory reports the start of construction of VERITAS, the
Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array System. The project
is being funded by the Department of Energy and the National Science
Foundation.
VERITAS will be an array of four 12-meter-diameter [39.4-foot-diameter]
optical reflectors with ultra-fast cameras which together will
form one of the most sensitive very high energy gamma-ray observatories
in the world. Each of the four telescopes will have 350
mirror facets creating its 12-meter aperture and each will be
equipped with a 499 pixel camera. The target date for completion
of construction is October 1, 2006. The project budget for construction
is $13.1 million.
VERITAS will be located in Horseshoe Canyon at the 5,800 foot
level on Kitt Peak in southern Arizona. This site is within the
leasehold for Kitt Peak National Observatory and provides high
altitude and easy access with excellent shielding from artificial
lights.
The VERITAS Collaboration has built a prototype telescope and
camera to demonstrate the design concepts for the full VERITAS
array. This prototype will be upgraded to provide one of the four
telescopes of VERITAS. The prototype telescope is located at a
temporary site at the Whipple Observatory Administrative Complex,
and it will be moved
to the Kitt Peak site in 2006.
The technique used to detect very high energy gamma rays was
pioneered at the Smithsonian's Whipple Observatory using the 10-meter
[32.8-foot] optical reflector built in 1968. Very high energy
gamma rays (photons with energy more than a million times the
energy of a photon of visible light) interact with the upper atmosphere
and initiate a cascade or shower of particles. The showers lead
to a short burst of blue light. Using arrays of fast photo-detectors
at the focus of the large optical reflector the Whipple group
recorded the image of the cascade of particles and showed that
they could identify those initiated by gamma rays from the much
more numerous background produced by charged cosmic rays.
Using this technique the Whipple group, with their collaborators,
detected the first source of TeV gamma-rays in the Galaxy in 1989
(the Crab Nebula, a supernova remnant) and the first extragalactic
source in 1992 (Markarian 421, an active galactic nucleus or quasar).
Since that time a number of overseas observatories have adopted
the Whipple technique and more than a dozen sources have been
established.
VERITAS will have a sensitivity that exceeds that of the existing
Whipple telescope by a factor of ten and it is anticipated that
more than a hundred sources will be detected. The scientific objectives
of the project include the study of pulsars, supernova remnants,
x-ray
binaries, black holes, active galactic nuclei, and gamma-ray bursts.
These cosmic particle accelerators may make possible the investigation
of new physics at extreme energies which are only just matched
on Earth by giant particle accelerators.
The VERITAS Collaboration includes seven institutions in the U.S.A.
and three non-USA institutions (in Canada, Ireland and the U.K.);
the U.S. institutions are the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory,
Iowa State University, Purdue University, the University of California
at Los Angeles, the University of Chicago, the University of Utah,
and Washington University at St. Louis. The non-USA institutions
are McGill University in Canada, the National University of Ireland,
University College, Dublin, and the University of Leeds in the
United Kingdom.
Through its Associates Program, VERITAS will serve the observing
needs of scientists at additional institutions. The Smithsonian
Astrophysical Observatory is the lead organization and host for
VERITAS, and the Project Office is at the Whipple Observatory
Administrative Complex in Amado, Arizona. In addition to funding
from the Department of
Energy and National Science Foundation, the project receives support
from the Smithsonian Institution, PPARC [Particle Physics and
Astronomy Research Council] in the U.K., Enterprise-Ireland in
Ireland and NSERC [Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council]
in Canada.
VERITAS will come into operation prior to the 2007 launch of
NASA's Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope (GLAST), for which
DOE is a partner in the main instrument, the Large Area Telescope.
GLAST is the next large space-based gamma-ray telescope and will
overlap VERITAS's lower energy range, the first time that space-
and ground-based telescopes have provided such complementarity.
Together VERITAS and GLAST will make
observations of cosmic gamma rays over five decades of energy
and greatly extend our knowledge of the universe at extreme energies.
Further information on VERITAS is available at http://veritas.sao.arizona.edu
or from the Public Information Office of the Whipple Observatory
at 520-670-5706.
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