An update on site search activities for SWGO
M. Santander, U. Barres de Almeida, J. A. Bellido, T. Bulik, C. Dib,, B. Dingus, S. Garcia, F. Guarino, P. Huentemeyer, D. Mandat, E. Meza, L., Mendes, L. Nellen, C. Ocampo, L. Otiniano, E. Quispe, A. Reisenegger, A. C., Rovero, F. Sanchez, A. Sandoval, R. Yanyachi

TL;DR
This paper provides an update on the site selection process for the Southern Wide-field Gamma-ray Observatory (SWGO), detailing candidate locations across South America and the ongoing evaluation efforts for final site selection.
Contribution
It reports the progress of site characterization and shortlisting activities for SWGO, highlighting the collaborative efforts across multiple countries and the criteria used for site evaluation.
Findings
Primary and backup sites identified in four countries.
Site visits validated proposed site characteristics.
Shortlisting phase underway with final site selection expected by end of 2023.
Abstract
The Southern Wide-field Gamma-ray Observatory (SWGO) is a project by scientists and engineers from 14 countries and 78 institutions to design and build the first wide-field, ground-based gamma-ray observatory in the Southern Hemisphere, with high duty cycle and covering an energy range rom hundreds of GeV to the PeV scale. The observatory will cover the Southern sky and aims to map the Galaxy's large-scale emission, as well as detecting transient and variable phenomena. The host sites under consideration are at a minimum altitude of 4400 m.a.s.l. and comprise two types: flat plateaus of at least 1 km for the installation of an array of tank-based water Cherenkov detectors (WCD), or large natural lakes for the direct deployment of WCD units. Four South American countries proposed excellent sites to host the observatory meeting these requirements. Argentina proposed two locations in…
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