The Future of Gamma-Ray Experiments in the MeV-EeV Range
Kristi Engel, Jordan Goodman, Petra Huentemeyer, Carolyn Kierans,, Tiffany R. Lewis, Michela Negro, Marcos Santander, David A. Williams, Alice, Allen, Tsuguo Aramaki, Rafael Alves Batista, Mathieu Benoit, Peter Bloser,, Jennifer Bohon, Aleksey E. Bolotnikov, Isabella Brewer

TL;DR
This paper reviews the current and future landscape of gamma-ray experiments from MeV to EeV energies, emphasizing technological advancements, proposed facilities, and their importance for multi-messenger astrophysics and fundamental physics in the coming decade.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of new and proposed gamma-ray technologies and facilities designed to address key scientific questions in high-energy astrophysics and particle physics.
Findings
Highlighting the importance of gamma-ray observations for multi-messenger astrophysics.
Review of emerging gamma-ray detection technologies and proposed facilities.
Emphasis on the need for long-term planning to sustain gamma-ray astrophysics infrastructure.
Abstract
Gamma-rays, the most energetic photons, carry information from the far reaches of extragalactic space with minimal interaction or loss of information. They bring messages about particle acceleration in environments so extreme they cannot be reproduced on earth for a closer look. Gamma-ray astrophysics is so complementary with collider work that particle physicists and astroparticle physicists are often one in the same. Gamma-ray instruments, especially the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, have been pivotal in major multi-messenger discoveries over the past decade. There is presently a great deal of interest and scientific expertise available to push forward new technologies, to plan and build space- and ground-based gamma-ray facilities, and to build multi-messenger networks with gamma rays at their core. It is therefore concerning that before the community comes together for planning…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Particle Detector Development and Performance
