The Cherenkov Telescope Array Observatory (CTAO) consists of three types of telescopes: large-sized (LST), mediumsized (MST), and small-sized (SST), distributed in two observing sites (North and South). For the CTA South “Alpha Configuration” the construction and installation of 37 (+5) SST telescopes (a number that could increase up to 70 in future upgrades) are planned. The SSTs are developed by an international consortium of institutes that will provide them as an in-kind contribution to CTAO. The SSTs rely on a Schwarzschild-Couder-like dual-mirror polynomial optical design, with a primary mirror of 4 m diameter, and are equipped with a focal plane camera based on SiPM detectors covering a field of view of ~9°. The current SST concept was validated by developing the prototype dual-mirror ASTRI-Horn Cherenkov telescope and the CHEC-S SiPM focal plane camera. In this contribution, we will present an overview of the SST key technologies, the current status of the SST project, and the planned schedule.
The Cherenkov Telescope Array1 (CTA) is the next-generation ground-based observatory for very-high-energy gamma rays. The CTA consists of three types of telescopes with different mirror areas to cover a wide energy range (20 GeV–300 TeV) with an order of magnitude higher sensitivity than the predecessors. Among those telescopes, the Large-Sized Telescope (LST) is designed to detect low-energy gamma rays between 20 GeV and a few TeV with a 23 m diameter mirror. To make the most of such a large light collection area (about 400 m2), the focal plane camera must detect as much reflected Cherenkov light as possible. We have developed each camera component to meet the CTA performance requirements for more than ten years and performed quality-control tests before installing the camera to the telescope.2, 3 The first LST (LST-1) was inaugurated in October 2018 in La Palma, Spain (Figure 1).4 After the inauguration, various calibration tests were performed to adjust hardware parameters and verify the camera performance. In parallel, we have been developing the analysis software to extract physical parameters from low-level data, taking into account some intrinsic characteristics of the switched capacitor arrays, Domino Ring Sampler version 4 (DRS4), used for sampling the waveform of a Cherenkov signal. In this contribution, we describe the hard- ware design of the LST camera in Section 2, a procedure for low-level calibration in Section 3, and the readout e of the LST camera after the hardware calibration with a dedicated analysis chain in Section 4.
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