Science with the Cherenkov Telescope Array
The Cherenkov Telescope Array Consortium: B.S. Acharya, I. Agudo, I., Al Samarai, R. Alfaro, J. Alfaro, C. Alispach, R. Alves Batista, J.-P. Amans,, E. Amato, G. Ambrosi, E. Antolini, L.A. Antonelli, C. Aramo, M. Araya, T., Armstrong, F. Arqueros, L. Arrabito, K. Asano

TL;DR
The Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) will be a leading global observatory for very high energy gamma-ray astronomy, enabling broad scientific exploration from black holes to dark matter with advanced performance and international collaboration.
Contribution
This paper presents the CTA project as a comprehensive, next-generation gamma-ray observatory with unprecedented capabilities and a structured scientific program for the next decade.
Findings
CTA will cover 20 GeV to 300 TeV energy range.
It will operate with 118 telescopes across hemispheres.
A core scientific program includes 40% of observing time for key projects.
Abstract
The Cherenkov Telescope Array, CTA, will be the major global observatory for very high energy gamma-ray astronomy over the next decade and beyond. The scientific potential of CTA is extremely broad: from understanding the role of relativistic cosmic particles to the search for dark matter. CTA is an explorer of the extreme universe, probing environments from the immediate neighbourhood of black holes to cosmic voids on the largest scales. Covering a huge range in photon energy from 20 GeV to 300 TeV, CTA will improve on all aspects of performance with respect to current instruments. The observatory will operate arrays on sites in both hemispheres to provide full sky coverage and will hence maximize the potential for the rarest phenomena such as very nearby supernovae, gamma-ray bursts or gravitational wave transients. With 99 telescopes on the southern site and 19 telescopes on the…
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