The Crab Nebula is the remnant of a powerful stellar explosion first observed in 1054 AD and is the most studied object outside of our solar system. Our three-pronged research is focused on understanding the emission mechanisms responsible for energy range 100 MeV – 10 TeV. Our project consisted of 1) making light curves of Crab Nebula from Fermi-LAT’s data, 2) extending and investigating the pre-existing VERITAS light curve, and 3) phaseograms of the Crab Pulsar using VERITAS’s data. Supervisor: Prof. Avery Archer, PhD This research is supported by grants from the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science, the U.S. National Science Foundation and the Smithsonian Institution, and by NSERC in Canada. This research used resources provided b...
Aims. We measure the Crab Nebula γ-ray spectral energy distribution in the ~100 TeV energy domain an...
Per request by the author, and with approval from the advisor and graduate office, the errata was ad...
Observations of the Crab pulsar using the atmospheric Cerenkov technique were conducted for 22 hours...
In 2013 March, a flaring episode from the Crab Nebula lasting ~2 weeks was detected by Fermi-LAT (La...
The Crab Nebula is the remnant of a powerful stellar explosion first observed in 1054 AD and has bee...
Pulsars are highly magnetised rotating neutron stars that emit regular,periodic pulses of radiation ...
The Crab nebula is one of the most studied cosmic particle accelerators, shining brightly across the...
Aims. We measure the Crab Nebula γ-ray spectral energy distribution in the ~100 TeV energy domain an...
Per request by the author, and with approval from the advisor and graduate office, the errata was ad...
Observations of the Crab pulsar using the atmospheric Cerenkov technique were conducted for 22 hours...
In 2013 March, a flaring episode from the Crab Nebula lasting ~2 weeks was detected by Fermi-LAT (La...
The Crab Nebula is the remnant of a powerful stellar explosion first observed in 1054 AD and has bee...
Pulsars are highly magnetised rotating neutron stars that emit regular,periodic pulses of radiation ...
The Crab nebula is one of the most studied cosmic particle accelerators, shining brightly across the...
Aims. We measure the Crab Nebula γ-ray spectral energy distribution in the ~100 TeV energy domain an...
Per request by the author, and with approval from the advisor and graduate office, the errata was ad...
Observations of the Crab pulsar using the atmospheric Cerenkov technique were conducted for 22 hours...