Science with the new generation high energy gamma- ray experiments
M. Alvarez, D. D'Armiento, G. Agnetta, A. Alberdi, A. Antonelli, A., Argan, P. Assis, E. A. Baltz, C. Bambi, G. Barbiellini, H. Bartko, M. Basset,, D. Bastieri, P. Belli, G. Benford, L. Bergstrom, R. Bernabei, G. Bertone, A., Biland, B. Biondo, F. Bocchino, E. Branchini

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advancements in high energy gamma-ray experiments, emphasizing their applications in dark matter research, cosmic ray studies, extra dimensions, and fundamental physics tests.
Contribution
It summarizes the latest experimental efforts and scientific goals in high energy gamma-ray research, highlighting new directions and technological developments.
Findings
Gamma-ray experiments provide insights into dark matter properties.
New results constrain theories of extra dimensions.
Tests of Lorentz invariance have advanced with recent data.
Abstract
This Conference is the fifth of a series of Workshops on High Energy Gamma- ray Experiments, following the Conferences held in Perugia 2003, Bari 2004, Cividale del Friuli 2005, Elba Island 2006. This year the focus was on the use of gamma-ray to study the Dark Matter component of the Universe, the origin and propagation of Cosmic Rays, Extra Large Spatial Dimensions and Tests of Lorentz Invariance.
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena
