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VERITAS: Status and Performance
VERITAS is an atmospheric Cherenkov telescope array sited in Tucson, Arizona.
The array is nearing completion and consists of four, 12m diameter telescopes.
The first telescope in the array has been operating since February 2005, while
observations with the full array are expected to begin in January, 2007. We
report here in some detail on the performance of the first VERITAS telescope,
and briefly discuss the first stereo observations.Comment: 8 pages. Submitted to Proceedings of "Science with New Generation of
High Energy Gamma-ray Experiments", Elba 200
VERITAS Observations of M 87 in 2011/2012
The giant radio galaxy M 87 is located at a distance of 16.7 Mpc and harbors
a super-massive black hole (6 billion solar masses) in its center. M 87 is one
of just three radio galaxies known to emit TeV gamma-rays. The structure of its
relativistic plasma jet, which is not pointing towards our line of sight, is
spatially resolved in X-ray (Chandra), optical and radio (VLA/VLBA)
observations. The mechanism and location of the TeV emitting region is one of
the least understood aspects of AGN. In spring 2008 and 2010, the three TeV
observatories VERITAS, MAGIC and H.E.S.S. detected two major TeV flares in
coordinated observations. Simultaneous high-resolution observations at other
wavelengths - radio (2008) and X-rays (2008/2010) - gave evidence that one of
the TeV flares was related to an event in the core region; however, no
common/repeated patterns could be identified so far. VERITAS continued to
monitor M 87 in 2011/2012. The results of these observations are presented.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; conference proceedings of the 5th International
Symposium on High-Energy Gamma-Ray Astronomy (Gamma2012
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