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Particle AstrophysicsParticle Astrophysics (also called Astroparticle Physics) is a relatively new area of research where ideas and data from elementary particle physics are applied to topics in astrophysics and cosmology, or vice versa. On the theoretical side this has been going on for many years where, for example, theories of nuclear and particle physics can be used in calculating details of stellar evolution or the very early history of the Universe itself.
![]() VERITAS array»
The four 12-m telescopes of the VERITAS array, now operating at the Mt.
Hopkins site (Arizona) to detect high-energy gamma rays.
The High-Energy Astrophysics group is part of the VERITAS collaboration which operates an array of four 12-m imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes in southern Arizona. With this instrument we carry out a program of very-high-energy (VHE) gamma-ray astronomy, observing photons with energy in the range from 50 GeV to 50 TeV. Sources of such photons are among the most violent and exotic in the Universe and include supernova remnants and pulsar wind nebula in our galaxy, as well as blazar-class active galactic nuclei (AGNs) at cosmological distances.
![]() VHE source catalog »
The current (September 2012) map of known very high-energy (VHE, E>100
GeV) sources, from tevcat.uchicago.edu , in galactic coordinates. The
different colours represent different types of source, including active
galactic nuclei (red), supernova remnants (green), and unidentified sources
(grey). The total VHE source count has increased by an order of magnitude
over the last decade, with VERITAS discovering nearly 20 of those since
2007.
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