255 research outputs found
Recent Results from the RICE Experiment at the South Pole
We present a compilation of recent results, submitted to the 2003
International Cosmic Ray Conference (Tsukuba, Japan). These include: a) Revised
Monte Carlo estimates of the radiofrequency signals produced by electromagnetic
showers in ice, b) an updated search for ultra-high energy (UHE) neutrinos
based on detection of radio-wavelength Cherenkov radiation; such radiation
results from neutrino-induced electromagnetic showers in cold Polar ice, and c)
An in situ measurement of the index of refraction through the South Polar firn.Comment: Compendium of RICE collaboration submissions to ICRC0
Alternative Detection Methods for Highest Energy Neutrinos
Several experimental techniques are currently under development, to measure
the expected tiny fluxes of highest energy neutrinos above 10**18 eV. Projects
in different stages of realisation are discussed here, which are based on
optical and radio as well as acoustic detectors. For the detection of neutrino
events in this energy range a combination of different detector concepts in one
experiment seems to be most promising.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, to be published in Nuclear Physics B (Proceedings
Supplement): Proceedings of the XXIst International Conference on Neutrino
Physics and Astrophysics, Paris, June 14-19, 200
Radio emission from cosmic ray air showers: simulation results and parametrization
We have developed a sophisticated model of the radio emission from extensive
air showers in the scheme of coherent geosynchrotron radiation, providing a
theoretical foundation for the interpretation of experimental data from current
and future experiments. Having verified the model through comparison of
analytic calculations, Monte Carlo simulations and historical experimental
data, we now present the results of extensive simulations performed with our
Monte Carlo code. Important results are the absence of significant asymmetries
in the total field strength emission pattern, the spectral dependence of the
radiation, the polarization characteristics of the emission (allowing an
unambiguous test of the geomagnetic emission mechanism), and the dependence of
the radio emission on important air shower and observer parameters such as the
shower zenith angle, the primary particle energy, the depth of the shower
maximum and the observer position. An analytic parametrization incorporating
the aforementioned dependences summarizes our results in a particularly useful
way.Comment: 33 pages, 24 figures, final version as accepted for publication by
Astropart. Physics, only minor updates since V
Calculation of High Energy Neutrino-Nucleon Cross Sections and Uncertainties Using the MSTW Parton Distribution Functions and Implications for Future Experiments
We present a new calculation of the cross sections for charged current (CC)
and neutral current (NC) and interactions in the neutrino
energy range GeV using the most recent MSTW parton
distribution functions (PDFs), MSTW 2008. We also present the associated
uncertainties propagated from the PDFs, as well as parametrizations of the
cross section central values, their uncertainty bounds, and the inelasticity
distributions for ease of use in Monte Carlo simulations. For the latter we
only provide parametrizations for energies above GeV. Finally, we assess
the feasibility of future neutrino experiments to constrain the cross
section in the ultra-high energy (UHE) regime using a technique that is
independent of the flux spectrum of incident neutrinos. A significant deviation
from the predicted Standard Model cross sections could be an indication of new
physics, such as extra space-time dimensions, and we present expected
constraints on such models as a function of the number of events observed in a
future subterranean neutrino detector.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figures, 5 tables, published in Phys.Rev.D. This version
fixes a typo in Equation 16 of the publication. Also since version v1, the
following changes are in v2 and also in the published version: tables with cs
values, parametrization of the y distribution at low-y improved, the
discussions on likelihood and also earth absorption are expanded, added a
needed minus sign in Eq. 17 of v
Ross Ice Shelf in situ radio-frequency ice attenuation
We have measured the in situ average electric field attenuation length for
radio-frequency signals broadcast vertically through the Ross Ice Shelf. We
chose a location, Moore Embayment, south of Minna Bluff, known for its high
reflectivity at the ice-sea interface. We confirmed specular reflection and
used the return pulses to measure the average attenuation length from 75-1250
MHz over the round-trip distance of 1155 m. We find the average electric field
attenuation length to vary from 500 m at 75 MHz to 300 m at 1250 MHz, with an
experimental uncertainty of 55 to 15 m. We discuss the implications for
neutrino telescopes that use the radio technique and include the Ross Ice Shelf
as part of their sensitive volume.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, Fig. 7 updated and minor text changes made since
the published versio
REAS3: Monte Carlo simulations of radio emission from cosmic ray air showers using an "end-point" formalism
In recent years, the freely available Monte Carlo code REAS for modelling
radio emission from cosmic ray air showers has evolved to include the full
complexity of air shower physics. However, it turned out that in REAS2 and all
other time-domain models which calculate the radio emission by superposing the
radiation of the single air shower electrons and positrons, the calculation of
the emission contributions was not fully consistent. In this article, we
present a revised implementation in REAS3, which incorporates the missing radio
emission due to the variation of the number of charged particles during the air
shower evolution using an "end-point formalism". With the inclusion of these
emission contributions, the structure of the simulated radio pulses changes
from unipolar to bipolar, and the azimuthal emission pattern becomes nearly
symmetric. Remaining asymmetries can be explained by radio emission due to the
variation of the net charge excess in air showers, which is automatically taken
into account in the new implementation. REAS3 constitutes the first
self-consistent time-domain implementation based on single particle emission
taking the full complexity of air shower physics into account, and is freely
available for all interested users.Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures accepted by Astroparticle Physics (2010
Macroscopic Geo-Magnetic Radiation Model; Polarization effects and finite volume calculations
An ultra-high-energy cosmic ray (UHECR) colliding with the Earth's atmosphere
gives rise to an Extensive Air Shower (EAS). Due to different charge separation
mechanisms within the thin shower front coherent electromagnetic radiation will
be emitted within the radio frequency range. A small deviation of the index of
refraction from unity will give rise to Cherenkov radiation up to distances of
100 meters from the shower core and therefore has to be included in a complete
description of the radio emission from an EAS. Interference between the
different radiation mechanisms, in combination with different polarization
behavior will reflect in a lateral distribution function (LDF) depending on the
orientation of the observer and a non-trivial fall-off of the radio signal as
function of distance to the shower core.Comment: Proceedings of the ARENA2010 conference, Nantes, Franc
Radio Emission from Cosmic Ray Air Showers: Coherent Geosynchrotron Radiation
Cosmic ray air showers have been known for over 30 years to emit pulsed radio
emission in the frequency range from a few to a few hundred MHz, an effect that
offers great opportunities for the study of extensive air showers with upcoming
fully digital "software radio telescopes" such as LOFAR and the enhancement of
particle detector arrays such as KASCADE Grande or the Pierre Auger
Observatory. However, there are still a lot of open questions regarding the
strength of the emission as well as the underlying emission mechanism.
Accompanying the development of a LOFAR prototype station dedicated to the
observation of radio emission from extensive air showers, LOPES, we therefore
take a new approach to modeling the emission process, interpreting it as
"coherent geosynchrotron emission" from electron-positron pairs gyrating in the
earth's magnetic field. We develop our model in a step-by-step procedure
incorporating increasingly realistic shower geometries in order to disentangle
the coherence effects arising from the different scales present in the air
shower structure and assess their influence on the spectrum and radial
dependence of the emitted radiation. We infer that the air shower "pancake"
thickness directly limits the frequency range of the emitted radiation, while
the radial dependence of the emission is mainly governed by the intrinsic
beaming cone of the synchrotron radiation and the superposition of the emission
over the air shower evolution as a whole. Our model succeeds in reproducing the
qualitative trends in the emission spectrum and radial dependence that were
observed in the past, and is consistent with the absolute level of the emission
within the relatively large systematic errors in the experimental data.Comment: 17 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication by Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Coherent Radiation from Extensive Air Showers in the Ultra-High Frequency Band
Using detailed Monte Carlo simulations we have characterized the features of
the radio emission of inclined air showers in the Ultra-High Frequency band
(300 MHz - 3 GHz). The Fourier-spectrum of the radiation is shown to have a
sizable intensity well into the GHz frequency range. The emission is mainly due
to transverse currents induced by the geomagnetic field and to the excess
charge produced by the Askaryan effect. At these frequencies only a
significantly reduced volume of the shower around the axis contributes
coherently to the signal observed on the ground. The size of the coherently
emitting volume depends on frequency, shower geometry and observer position,
and is interpreted in terms of the relative time delays. At ground level, the
maximum emission at high frequencies is concentrated in an elliptical ring-like
region around the intersection of a Cherenkov cone with its vertex at shower
maximum and the ground. The frequency spectrum of inclined showers when
observed at positions that view shower maximum in the Cherenkov direction, is
shown to be in broad agreement with the pulses detected by the Antarctic
Impulsive Transient Antenna (ANITA) experiment, making the interpretation that
they are due to Ultra-High Energy Cosmic Ray atmospheric showers consistent
with our simulations. These results are also of great importance for
experiments aiming to detect molecular bremsstrahlung radiation in the GHz
range as they present an important background for its detection.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Time-Domain Measurement of Broadband Coherent Cherenkov Radiation
We report on further analysis of coherent microwave Cherenkov impulses
emitted via the Askaryan mechanism from high-energy electromagnetic showers
produced at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC). In this report, the
time-domain based analysis of the measurements made with a broadband (nominally
1-18 GHz) log periodic dipole array antenna is described. The theory of a
transmit-receive antenna system based on time-dependent effective height
operator is summarized and applied to fully characterize the measurement
antenna system and to reconstruct the electric field induced via the Askaryan
process. The observed radiation intensity and phase as functions of frequency
were found to agree with expectations from 0.75-11.5 GHz within experimental
errors on the normalized electric field magnitude and the relative phase; 0.039
microV/MHz/TeV and 17 deg, respectively. This is the first time this agreement
has been observed over such a broad bandwidth, and the first measurement of the
relative phase variation of an Askaryan pulse. The importance of validation of
the Askaryan mechanism is significant since it is viewed as the most promising
way to detect cosmogenic neutrino fluxes at E > 10^15 eV.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, accepted by Phys. Rev.
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