1 00:00:00,020 --> 00:00:04,030 [Music] 2 00:00:04,050 --> 00:00:08,080 [Music] 3 00:00:08,100 --> 00:00:12,160 [Music] 4 00:00:12,180 --> 00:00:16,260 Julie McEnery: Fermi is an observatory designed to see the 5 00:00:16,280 --> 00:00:20,360 most extreme places in the universe. We see gamma rays, which are are the highest-energy 6 00:00:20,380 --> 00:00:24,400 form of light, and with each object that we see these gamma rays from, what we're doing is 7 00:00:24,420 --> 00:00:28,450 exploring some of the places in the universe with most extreme environments. 8 00:00:28,470 --> 00:00:32,550 Matthew Wood: The kinds of objects that it can study are pulsars and neutron 9 00:00:32,570 --> 00:00:36,610 stars, black holes, as well as dark matter. 10 00:00:36,630 --> 00:00:40,660 The main challenge in detecting gamma rays is that 11 00:00:40,680 --> 00:00:44,710 the Earth's atmosphere is opaque to them, so to get around that we 12 00:00:44,730 --> 00:00:48,760 use satellites in space to measure gamma rays. Julie: We don't have 13 00:00:48,780 --> 00:00:52,820 lenses and mirrors because gamma rays would just go straight 14 00:00:52,840 --> 00:00:56,880 through them. The main instrument on Fermi is the Large Area Telescope. 15 00:00:56,900 --> 00:01:00,920 It's a telescope that detects gamma rays by converting them into 16 00:01:00,940 --> 00:01:04,990 electron-positron pairs. Those are charged particles, so fundamentally 17 00:01:05,010 --> 00:01:09,120 our detector is designed to measure the tracks of those 18 00:01:09,140 --> 00:01:13,210 charged particles moving through and from that figure out where the gamma ray came from. 19 00:01:13,230 --> 00:01:17,270 The problem is that in the environment of 20 00:01:17,290 --> 00:01:21,350 low Earth orbit there's a very large number of charged particles. So for every 21 00:01:21,370 --> 00:01:25,410 gamma ray that we detect, ten thousand charged particles are coming 22 00:01:25,430 --> 00:01:29,530 through our detector. So we have to be able to tell the difference between 23 00:01:29,550 --> 00:01:33,630 that one gamma ray from those ten thousand charged particles, 24 00:01:33,650 --> 00:01:37,740 and that's the challenge. Often, they deposit a 25 00:01:37,760 --> 00:01:41,820 large amount of energy and stuff splashes up in all directions and you end up with 26 00:01:41,840 --> 00:01:45,830 extra hits in the tracking part of the detector that are not actually 27 00:01:45,850 --> 00:01:49,910 from the original electron and positron, but rather from 28 00:01:49,930 --> 00:01:54,020 energy that's kicked up when they interact further in the calorimeter. 29 00:01:54,040 --> 00:01:58,080 Philippe Bruel: So, to analyze these events we have written 30 00:01:58,100 --> 00:02:02,200 a very long and complex program that basically 31 00:02:02,220 --> 00:02:06,210 uses all the information that was recorded by the instrument 32 00:02:06,230 --> 00:02:10,310 and figures out what is the direction of the gamma ray, 33 00:02:10,330 --> 00:02:14,410 its energy, and whether or not it's 34 00:02:14,430 --> 00:02:18,560 a real gamma ray and not a charged cosmic ray. 35 00:02:18,580 --> 00:02:22,640 So, obviously, software is really important for the LAT. 36 00:02:22,660 --> 00:02:26,810 Matthew: The software that we use to analyze the LAT data 37 00:02:26,830 --> 00:02:30,850 has gone through many revisions over the course of the mission, but Pass 8 is 38 00:02:30,870 --> 00:02:34,940 really the first revision of the software where we took into account 39 00:02:34,960 --> 00:02:39,010 all the experience that we gained from operating 40 00:02:39,030 --> 00:02:43,090 the LAT in its orbital environment. Julie: Pass 8 41 00:02:43,110 --> 00:02:47,160 has given us the equivalent of an in-space hardware upgrade, 42 00:02:47,180 --> 00:02:51,300 but on the ground. Matthew: We've increased the sensitivity of the LAT instrument 43 00:02:51,320 --> 00:02:55,360 by 40 percent and this is roughly equivalent to 44 00:02:55,380 --> 00:02:59,510 launching another LAT instrument and operating it as well for seven years. 45 00:02:59,530 --> 00:03:03,600 So it's a fairly substantial improvement in the LAT performance. 46 00:03:03,620 --> 00:03:07,660 Julie: The most immediate, kind of shocking, benefit of 47 00:03:07,680 --> 00:03:11,750 Pass 8 is our ability to view the sky 48 00:03:11,770 --> 00:03:15,870 at high energies where we have particularly improved our 49 00:03:15,890 --> 00:03:19,930 angular resolution, so the sharpness is very evident, and we've added 50 00:03:19,950 --> 00:03:23,990 lots more gamma rays, so we filled in what was kind of 51 00:03:24,010 --> 00:03:28,100 a spotty sky. Pass 8 has 52 00:03:28,120 --> 00:03:32,220 made everything better, but one of the things that it's made better is that it's 53 00:03:32,240 --> 00:03:36,420 allowed us to open our gamma-ray eyes to higher energies than before, so that's a completely 54 00:03:36,440 --> 00:03:40,500 new view, and it's allowed us to open our gamma-ray energy eyes to, at energies 55 00:03:40,520 --> 00:03:44,600 lower than before, so that's another completely new view. In addition to 56 00:03:44,620 --> 00:03:48,680 improving everything across the entire energy range. 57 00:03:48,700 --> 00:03:52,790 We have a wider field of view. We see more photons from 58 00:03:52,810 --> 00:03:56,860 any given point in our detector than we did before. Matthew: The improvement 59 00:03:56,880 --> 00:04:00,910 that we've made to the software retroactively apply to all the data that we've 60 00:04:00,930 --> 00:04:05,010 collected, and so these improvements significantly enhance 61 00:04:05,030 --> 00:04:09,140 what we can do with the data we already have, as well as the data 62 00:04:09,160 --> 00:04:13,210 that we'll collect in the future. Julie: With Pass 8, we're able to go back to the 63 00:04:13,230 --> 00:04:17,350 sensor-by-sensor information and we can reprocess that data 64 00:04:17,370 --> 00:04:21,440 into the improved performance that we get with Pass 8, 65 00:04:21,460 --> 00:04:25,460 from the first day of the mission, from August 2008, 66 00:04:25,480 --> 00:04:29,480 right the way up to the present day. Philippe: So with Pass 8, we 67 00:04:29,500 --> 00:04:33,540 use more completely and more efficiently all the information 68 00:04:33,560 --> 00:04:37,640 that is recorded by the instrument. One thing that I like is 69 00:04:37,660 --> 00:04:41,720 that these photons took a lot of time 70 00:04:41,740 --> 00:04:45,800 to come to Earth, so that it's a pity to 71 00:04:45,820 --> 00:04:49,870 just miss one of them. So I'm glad that with Pass 8 we're 72 00:04:49,890 --> 00:04:53,980 more efficient and we record every gamma ray that passes 73 00:04:54,000 --> 00:04:58,070 through us. Julie: Look, obviously I'm biased. You know, I do think it's really cool. 74 00:04:58,090 --> 00:05:02,110 And, you know, when I first started working on Fermi, and 75 00:05:02,130 --> 00:05:06,200 you know, you start, you think "Oh how does this detector work?" and then you think more and think more 76 00:05:06,220 --> 00:05:10,250 about it. This is really cool! This is really cool even if you weren't doing any 77 00:05:10,270 --> 00:05:14,410 astrophysics with it. And then you add the astrophysics and it's awesome. 78 00:05:14,430 --> 00:05:18,560 [Music] 79 00:05:18,580 --> 00:05:22,660 [Beeping] 80 00:05:22,680 --> 00:05:29,943 [Beeping]