The Large Area Telescope on the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope Mission
Fermi/LAT Collaboration: W. B. Atwood, et al.

TL;DR
The Fermi Large Area Telescope is a high-energy gamma-ray instrument designed to survey the sky, detect transient events, localize sources precisely, and explore cosmic phenomena including dark matter, with detailed performance and science objectives.
Contribution
This paper introduces the design, expected performance, and scientific goals of the Fermi LAT, a novel wide-field gamma-ray telescope for high-energy astrophysics.
Findings
Design specifications and expected performance of LAT.
Key science objectives including source cataloging and dark matter search.
Instrument capabilities for gamma-ray burst detection and source localization.
Abstract
(Abridged) The Large Area Telescope (Fermi/LAT, hereafter LAT), the primary instrument on the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope (Fermi) mission, is an imaging, wide field-of-view, high-energy gamma-ray telescope, covering the energy range from below 20 MeV to more than 300 GeV. This paper describes the LAT, its pre-flight expected performance, and summarizes the key science objectives that will be addressed. On-orbit performance will be presented in detail in a subsequent paper. The LAT is a pair-conversion telescope with a precision tracker and calorimeter, each consisting of a 4x4 array of 16 modules, a segmented anticoincidence detector that covers the tracker array, and a programmable trigger and data acquisition system. Each tracker module has a vertical stack of 18 x,y tracking planes, including two layers (x and y) of single-sided silicon strip detectors and high-Z converter…
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