English

Towards a common analysis framework for gamma-ray astronomy

Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics 2019-08-14 v1 High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena

Abstract

Thanks to the success of current gamma-ray telescopes (Fermi, H.E.S.S., MAGIC, VERITAS), and in view of the prospects of planned observatories such as the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) or the High-Altitude Water Cherenkov Observatory (HAWC), gamma-ray astronomy is becoming an integral part of modern astrophysical research. Analysis today relies on a large diversity of tools and software frameworks that were specifically and independently developed for each instrument. With the aim of unifying the analysis of gamma-ray data, we are currently developing GammaLib (http://sourceforge.net/projects/gammalib), a C++ library interfaced to Python that provides a framework for an instrument independent analysis of gamma-ray data. On top of GammaLib we have created ctools (http://cta.irap.omp.eu/ctools), a set of analysis executables that is being developed as one of the prototypes for the CTA high-level science analysis framework, but which is equally suited for the analysis of gamma-ray data from the existing Fermi-LAT telescope and current Cherenkov telescope arrays. In particular, ctools and GammaLib provide the novel opportunity of a simultaneous multi-instrument analysis. We present the status of the software development, and illustrate its capabilities with a spectral analysis of the Crab nebula emission over seven decades in energy (1 MeV to 10 TeV) using multi-instrument (COMPTEL, Fermi-LAT, H.E.S.S.) gamma-ray observations as well as a simulation of a CTA observation of the supernova remnant RX J1713.7-3946.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1307.5560,
  title  = {Towards a common analysis framework for gamma-ray astronomy},
  author = {Jürgen Knödlseder and Michael Mayer and Christoph Deil and Anneli Schulz and Marie-Hélène Grondin and Pierrick Martin and Sylvie Brau-Nogué},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1307.5560},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

In Proceedings of the 33rd International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC2013), Rio de Janeiro (Brazil). All CTA contributions at arXiv:1307.2232

R2 v1 2026-06-22T00:55:05.214Z