Search for Short Bursts of Gamma Rays Above 100 MeV from the Crab using VERITAS and SGARFACE
/ Authors
/ Abstract
The phenomenon of giant radio pulses (GRP) from the Crab Pulsar can be studied at gamma-ray energies using atmospheric-Cherenkov telescopes such as VERITAS and the SGARFACE experiment attached to the Whipple 10 m telescope. Although these instruments are generally used for very-high-energy gamma-ray astronomy above 100 GeV, they also provide substantial sensitivity to short bursts of photons above 100 MeV lasting up to 15 $\mu$s. Motivated by the theoretical predictions for short microsecond-scale GeV bursts as counterparts to GRPs \cite{Lyutikov2007}, we report on a search for gamma-ray emission using simultaneous observations of the Crab Pulsar taken with VERITAS and the SGARFACE experiment.
Journal: arXiv: Astrophysics of Galaxies