1 / 17

CPPM : M. Ageron, I. Al Samarai, V. Bertin, J. Brunner, J. Busto, D. Dornic, S. Escoffier

CPPM : M. Ageron, I. Al Samarai, V. Bertin, J. Brunner, J. Busto, D. Dornic, S. Escoffier IRFU : B. Vallage LAM : S. Basa, B. Gendre, A. Mazure TAROT : M. Boer, A. Le Van Suu (OHP), A. Klotz (CESR). Scientific motivations. Detection of transient sources such as: Gamma Ray Bursts

venus
Télécharger la présentation

CPPM : M. Ageron, I. Al Samarai, V. Bertin, J. Brunner, J. Busto, D. Dornic, S. Escoffier

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CPPM: M. Ageron, I. Al Samarai, V. Bertin, J. Brunner, J. Busto, D. Dornic, S. Escoffier IRFU: B. Vallage LAM: S. Basa, B. Gendre, A. Mazure TAROT: M. Boer, A. Le Van Suu (OHP), A. Klotz (CESR)

  2. Scientific motivations Detection of transient sources such as: • Gamma Ray Bursts • Core Collapse Sne • AGNs • Microquasars • … • Observed in many wavelengths (X, visible…) • Potential neutrino emitters • So far, only 1 detection of extrasolar neutrinos : SN1987A Microquasar luminosity vs time

  3. Scientific motivations Some of the most interesting: GRBs: • Highly energetic gamma bursts (~1051 ergs) • Observed at a rate <1 per day with gamma satellites • Other detections are triggered by a satellite alert (Optical telescopes, neutrino telescopes…) • Failed GRBs: • Not visible in gamma but potentially neutrino emitters • How to trigger a detection for such objects?

  4. The GRBs/SNe Connection • Rate of local GRBs << SN rate

  5. The GRBs/SNe Connection • Rate of local GRBs << SN rate • Core Collapse SNe : jets with different velocities: • Highly relativistic GRBs () • Mildly relativistic  « Failed GRBs » (few%) (hidden in gamma)

  6. Expected neutrino flux from a FGRB in ANTARES In « failed GRBs »: • No gamma counterpart • Still, protons are accelerated • p-p interaction Mesons • Mesons decay into neutrinos Ando & Beacom (PRL 95,061103(2005)) Razzaques, Meszaros,waxman (PRL 93,181101(2004)) (PRL 94, 109903(2005))

  7. Expected neutrino flux from a FGRB in ANTARES In « failed GRBs »: • No gamma counterpart • Still, protons are accelerated • p-p interaction Mesons • Mesons decay into neutrinos Antares threshold Ando & Beacom (PRL 95,061103(2005)) Razzaques, Meszaros,Waxman (PRL 93,181101(2004)) (PRL 94, 109903(2005))

  8. For 1 SNe • The Multiplet trigger can push the horizon of detection further than the HE event trigger does • For the Multiplet • (>= 2 neutrinos) trigger: • Horizon at 10 Mpc When applying HE event conditions, • For 1 HE neutrino: Horizon at 1 Mpc LE events HE events

  9. Idea: Optical detection of transient sources triggered by ”special” neutrino events. • Main advantage: covers the full hemisphere • TAROT Sud (Chili) • FOV :2° x 2° • Fast repositioning (10s) • Good sensitivity (V<19) ANTARES: 900 PMTs

  10. Triggers: Multiplet of neutrinos Single HE neutrino Alert Keys of success: 1. High performance of the online reconstruction 2. Good event selection Upward-going event GCN alert On-line reconstruction • TAROT Sud (Chili) • FOV :2° x 2° • Fast repositioning (10s) • Good sensitivity (V<19) ANTARES: 900 PMTs

  11. Median Angular resolution vs energy  Angular resolution as good as 0.5° for highest energetic events • A very fast algorithm is needed Reconstruction taking 10ms / event is implemented • The better is the reconstruction angular resolution the easier it is to find the source in the image analysis phase Reconstruction on at least 3 detector lines required to avoid mirror solutions

  12. Keys of success (2/2) Event selection The TaToO project Background estimation: • Trigger: Doublet of neutrinos • A detection would be have 3 significance • High energy events Background: • Dominated by atmospheric neutrinos Seen on at least three detector lines After cuts on energy estimators: ΔΩ = 3° x 3° Δt = 15 min MC Emoy ~4 TeV Median Ang. Res.~ 0.75°

  13. Keys of success (2/2) Event selection The TaToO project • High energy events Background: • Dominated by atmospheric neutrinos Number of hits used in track fit 2008 data After cuts on energy estimators: MC Total amplitude 2008 data Emoy ~4 TeV Median Ang. Res.~ 0.75° • Tuned actual cuts to send 1 to 2 alerts/ month to TAROT; mostly would be from HE trigger

  14. Example of HE neutrino Representation 3D Representation 2D (height/time) z t

  15. F ~ t-1.2 Core-collapse SNe GRB afterglow 10 Minutes TAROT observation strategy after alert reception: Real time (T0) : 6 images of 3 minutes T0+1 day, +3 days, +9 days and +27 days This detection strategy is appropriate to follow the main objects time profile and to allow a reasonable time for image analysis The Observation strategy Two promising source classes for this detection:

  16. Still to be done: Test the subtraction algorithm: some problems due to the very variable PSF (variable atmospheric conditions, image quality on the CCD edges) Include the tool in an automatic system Tuning a tool originally used for SNe identification Increasing luminosity Decreasing luminosity Badly substracted Example A standard image Subtraction result

  17. TAToO is a promising detection tool of transient sources using neutrino telescopes as a trigger • This is the only method to detect satellites hidden sources as FGRBs • Several alerts sent already to Tarot • Image analysis tools are studied • In the future, this system is intended to be coupled with other detectors (Rotse, Swift, ATA…)

More Related