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Purpose

This page aims to pull together definitions for the jargon and technical terms that get used by the Fermi collaboration. A glossary exists in the SLAC Workbook, but as far as we can tell it hasn't been updated in a while. A short glossary also exists in the FSSC Cicerone.

The purpose of this glossary in particular is to provide new Fermi members (especially junior members) with a resource to tackle all the jargon that gets tossed around. Therefore, please avoid using more jargon to explain jargon. The definitions should stand alone as much as possible, and can link to papers / Confluence pages / etc. for more detailed information. The explanations should only provide what is necessary for a basic understanding; details can go in the links.

This glossary focuses on terms that are difficult to just google ("GlastRelease", "theta"). It also includes googleable terms that have specific applications to Fermi (e.g., AGN observations in gamma rays rather than AGN in general).

Note that while this particular page is in the LAT Science Public area of Confluence and is accessible to everyone, many of the links will probably lead to internal (collaboration-only) pages.

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#FGLA catalog of LAT point sources, which are objects in the sky that are known to emit gamma rays over periods of time.
These are often active galaxies, supernova remnants, pulsars, and pulsar wind nebulae.
So far, the LAT team has published the 1FGL (which used 11 months of LAT data) and 2FGL (2 years of LAT data).
There is also a 0FGL (3 months of LAT data), also known as the Bright LAT source list.
The Catalog group is currently working on 3FGL.
(see also Catalog

0FGL page
1FGL catalog
(with paper link)
2FGL catalog
(with paper link)
3FGL paper

1FHLA catalog of LAT point sources (objects in the sky that are known to emit gamma rays over periods of time) that are only detected above 10 GeV.
(In contrast, most standard LAT analysis begins at 100 MeV.)
The 1FHL used 3 years of LAT data.
(see also Catalog
1FHL Confluence page
#LAC 

1LAC Confluence page
2LAC Confluence page

   
   

 

A

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ACD(Anti-Coincidence Detector)
The ACD is the collection of scintillating tiles that detect charged particles, and is crucial to background rejection.
The ACD covers the tracker (the part of the LAT that converts gamma rays into electron-positron pairs and then tracks these pairs' trajectories).
Charged particles will also register as signals in the tracker, so the ACD is used to determine if a signal is actually a charged particle and not a gamma ray.
If an ACD tile has a "hit" (detects a charged particle) that lines up with a signal, then that fact is used to "veto" the signal (i.e., declare that it's not a gamma ray).
 
Acceptance  
AGN (group)(Active Galactic Nuclei) AGN group page
ARR(Autonomous Repoint Request)  
ATel(Astronomer's Telegram) 
ATS  
   
   
   
   
   
   

B

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BA(burst advocate)
BAs are LAT team members who keep an eye on gamma-ray burst activity.

BA Confluence page
back  
back-converting  
batch / batch farm  
BGO(bismuth germanate detector) 
blazar  
BL Lac  
boresight  
   

C

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C&A (group)(Calibration and Analysis)C&A group page
CAL(Calorimeter) 
cat. / Cat.(category)
Papers written by the LAT collaboration are assigned a category out of I, II, and III.
category explanation
catalog LAT catalogs
Catalog (group) Catalog group page
clean (event class)  
CR(cosmic ray) 
CTB  
   
   
   

D

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dec(declination) 
diffuse (group) Diffuse group page
diffuse (event class)In previous versions of the LAT data, the diffuse event class was the event class with the most stringent cuts on background.
However, the "diffuse" name is no longer used. 
 
DM (group)(Dark Matter)DM group link
DQM(Data Quality Monitor) 
ds9(Deep Space 9 (seriously))
ds9 is a piece of software that is used for data visualization and imaging.
For instance, someone analyzing Fermi data might use ds9 to look at a counts map (a map of where the photons that Fermi observed came from).
http://ds9.si.edu/site/Home.html
dSph(dwarf spheroidal galaxy) 

E

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Earth limb / Earth's limb

The Earth is a bright emitter of gamma rays, due to cosmic rays interacting with the atmosphere.
When the Earth is in the LAT field of view, the part of the Earth that is visible is known as the Earth limb.
Almost all LAT analysis needs to minimize the contribution from the Earth limb.
(see zenith angle cut

 
EBL(Extragalactic Background Light) 
effective area  
EPO (group)(Education and Public Outreach)EPO group link
event  
event class  
Evosee also "SeeVogh" 
exposure  
   

F

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FA(flare advocate) 
FITS / fits / .fits (file type)(Flexible Image Transport System)
FITS files are often used in astronomy, and are made of one or more HDUs (Header and Data Unit).
Each HDU has a header with general information about the file, the instrument, etc., as well as a table or image.
Public LAT data is always (?) distributed as FITS files.
FITS Support Office
FltOps(Flight Operations) 
FOT(Flight Operations Team)
The FOT is the staff at the Mission Operations Center (at NASA Goddard), which controls the spacecraft.
The FOT is responsible for, among other things, inputting special maneuvers such as TOOs.
 
FOV / FoV(field of view) 
front  
front-converting  
FSW(Flight Software) 
FT1 (file)FT1 files are the LAT public data files with information on each individual photon. 
FT2 (file)FT2 files are the LAT public data files with information on the spacecraft (where it is, where it's pointing, etc.). 
FTOOLS  
fv(Fits Viewer)
fv is a program to view FITS files. 
fv main page

G

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GALPROP  
GBM(Gamma-ray Burst Monitor)
The GBM is the other instrument on Fermi. It is made of 12 NaI (sodium iodide) and 2 BGO (bismuth germanate) detectors.
The GBM detects emission from gamma-ray bursts, solar flares, terrestrial gamma-ray flashes ...
 
GCN(Gamma-ray Coordinates Network)  
GEANT  
ghostsGhosts are events where two particles enter the LAT in a small enough time frame that the LAT considers the interactions a single event.
A typical example would be a gamma ray and proton entering the LAT near simultaneously.
This caused a fraction of gamma-ray events to be vetoed.
This problem was first addressed in Pass7 and substantial improvements have been made in Pass8 to recover gamma-ray data from these ghost events.
 
GI(Guest Investigator) 
GLAST(Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope)
GLAST is the name that Fermi was referred to before it was launched.
It is tradition to give NASA missions a different name after launch, as a good-luck superstition.
 
GlastRelease  
GLEAM  
GRB (group)(Gamma-Ray Burst)GRB group page
gt_____The standard set of software used to analyze LAT data are called the Science Tools.
Each individual tool has a specific function.
The names all start with "gt", for "GLAST", which was the original pre-launch name of Fermi.
Science Tools references
   
   

H

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HEASARC(High Energy Astrophysics Science Archive Research Center)HEASARC NASA page
   
   
   
   
   

I

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IRF(Instrument Response Function) 
ISOC  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   

J

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JIRA  
   
   
   
   

K

L

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L1Proc(Level 1 Processing) 
LAT(Large Area Telescope) 
light curve  
likelihood  
livetime  
LLE(LAT Low Energy)  
LMC(Large Magellanic Cloud) 
LPA  

M

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MC(Monte Carlo) 
merit / merit file  
MET(Mission Elapsed Time)  
MIP(minimum ionizing particle) 
MOC  
MSP(millisecond pulsar) 
MW(multiwavelength) 

N

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nadir  
nadir observations  
NaI

(sodium iodide)
The Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM), the second instrument on Fermi, is made of 12 NaI detectors (and 2 BGO ones).
The NaIs detect photons between ~8 keV and 40 MeV.
They are positioned around the spacecraft to view the entire sky at all times.
The GBM team uses the amount of signal in each NaI detector to calculate localizations. 

 
   

O

P

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Pass #, version #  
phi  
pipeline  
pointed observations  
pole pointing  
PSF(point-spread function) 
PSR(pulsar)Pulsar group page
PWN(pulsar wind nebula) 
   

Q

R

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RA(right ascension) 
ROI(region of interest)
The ROI is the region of space that is being analyzed. A typical ROI for an individual source (such as a pulsar or a gamma-ray burst)
is 10 or 12 degrees, although the exact size can differ and depends on the many factors.
 
ROOT, .root file  

S

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SAA

(South Atlantic Anomaly)
The SAA is a region of the sky over the southern part of the Atlantic ocean that contains a lot of charged particle activity.
Both the LAT and the GBM detect charged particles as part of the background, so when the spacecraft enters the SAA,
the detectors are turned off (data is not stored).
The LAT and GBM have slightly different definitions of the borders of the SAA. 

 
Science Tools  
SeeVogh  
selection  
senior review  
SMC(Small Magellanic Cloud) 
SNR(supernova remnant)SNR group page
source (event class)  
survey mode  
star trackers  

T

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TDRSS(Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System) 
TGFs(terrestrial gamma-ray flashes) 
theta  
ToO(Target of Opportunity) 
transient  
transient (event class)  
TRK(Tracker)
The Tracker is a part of the LAT whose purpose is twofold: 1) To convert gamma rays into electron-positron pairs, and
2) To track these pairs of charged particles through the instrument in order to figure out where the original gamma ray came from.
The Tracker is made of alternating layers of tungsten foils (to convert the gamma rays) and silicon strip detectors (to track
the pairs), arranged in 64 columns (8 by 8). 
 
Trunc64  
TS(test statistic) 

U

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ultraclean (event class)  
   
   

V

W

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walkthrough  
WAM(Weekly Analysis Meeting)
An online collaboration-wide meeting held every Friday at 8 am PST / 11 am EST / 5 pm CST.
The WAMs are held over SeeVogh, which can be downloaded at this website.
Topics discussed during WAMs include collaboration-wide items of interest (such as newly released Fermi data),
detections of GRBs (gamma-ray bursts) and flaring AGN (active galactic nuclei), and walkthroughs (short summaries)
of upcoming papers within the LAT collaboration. 
WAM agenda page
white paper  
   
   

X

Y

Z

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zenithThe point on the sky that is opposite to the Earth for the Fermi spacecraft.
(diagram from Wikipedia)
(imagine the person is Fermi
zenith angle cutThe zenith angle cut defines the maximum zenith angle for all the photons that will be used in an analysis.
The zenith angle cut is used to cut down on the emission from the Earth limb (the part of the Earth that is in the LAT field of view). 
 
   
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