The Louvre Museum in Paris has reopened three days after jewellery worth 88 million euros (£76m; $88m) was stolen in a brazen daylight robbery.

Visitors were welcomed back to the Louvre from 09:00 local time (07:00 GMT) on Wednesday, but the museum said its Apollo Gallery - where the heist took place - remained closed.

Thieves wielding power tools took less than eight minutes to break into the world's most-visited museum and made off with the loot on scooters on Sunday morning. They have not yet been caught.

The museum's director Laurence des Cars is set to appear before the French Senate's culture committee on Wednesday afternoon.

She has not yet spoken publicly about the robbery, which President Emmanuel Macron described as an attack on the country's heritage.

A preliminary report found one in three rooms in the Louvre lacked CCTV and that its wider alarm system did not go off. Security measures have been tightened at cultural institutions across France as a result.

The museum shut its doors after the daring heist, telling visitors who had booked ahead of time that they would be refunded.

Meanwhile, dozens of investigators have been working to catch the criminals. Four masked thieves used a truck with a set of mechanical ladders mounted on it to gain access to the Gallery of Apollo via a balcony close to the River Seine at 09:30 on Sunday.

Two of them cut through a glass window on the first floor using a battery-powered disc cutter and entered the museum. They then threatened the guards inside, who evacuated the building, and cut through the glass of two display cases containing jewels.

The thieves had tried to set fire to their vehicle outside but were prevented by the intervention of a member of museum staff. They were seen making off on scooters at 09:38.

The stolen items include a diamond and emerald necklace that Emperor Napoleon gave to his wife, a tiara worn by Empress Eugenie, and several pieces previously owned by Queen Marie-Amelie. Investigators also found a damaged crown that used to belong to Empress Eugenie on the thieves' escape route, thought to have been dropped during their getaway.