Observations of the Crab Nebula and Pulsar with the Large-Sized Telescope Prototype of the Cherenkov Telescope Array
CTA-LST Project: H. Abe (1), K. Abe (2), S. Abe (1), A. Aguasca-Cabot, (3), I. Agudo (4), N. Alvarez Crespo (5), L. A. Antonelli (6), C. Aramo (7),, A. Arbet-Engels (8), C. Arcaro (9), M. Artero (10), K. Asano (1), P. Aubert, (11), A. Baktash (12), A. Bamba (13)

TL;DR
This paper reports on the first observations of the Crab Nebula using the LST-1 telescope prototype of CTA, demonstrating its performance and capabilities in very-high-energy gamma-ray astronomy.
Contribution
It provides the first performance assessment of LST-1 with real data, confirming expected sensitivity and resolution in the lowest energy range of CTA.
Findings
LST-1 achieved an energy threshold of ~20 GeV at trigger level.
Flux sensitivity around 1.1% of Crab Nebula flux above 250 GeV.
Spectral and temporal observations of Crab Nebula match previous measurements.
Abstract
CTA (Cherenkov Telescope Array) is the next generation ground-based observatory for gamma-ray astronomy at very-high energies. The Large-Sized Telescope prototype (LST-1) is located at the Northern site of CTA, on the Canary Island of La Palma. LSTs are designed to provide optimal performance in the lowest part of the energy range covered by CTA, down to GeV. LST-1 started performing astronomical observations in November 2019, during its commissioning phase, and it has been taking data since then. We present the first LST-1 observations of the Crab Nebula, the standard candle of very-high energy gamma-ray astronomy, and use them, together with simulations, to assess the basic performance parameters of the telescope. The data sample consists of around 36 hours of observations at low zenith angles collected between November 2020 and March 2022. LST-1 has reached the expected…
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