51 research outputs found
Neutrino Target-of-Opportunity Sky Coverage and Scheduler for EUSO-SPB2
Very-high-energy neutrinos can be observed by detecting air shower signals.
Detection of transient target of opportunity (ToO) neutrino sources is part of
a broader multimessenger program. The Extreme Universe Space Observatory on a
Super Pressure Balloon 2 (EUSO-SPB2) Mission, launched on May 12, 2023, was
equipped with an optical Cherenkov Telescope (CT) designed to detect up-going
air showers sourced by Earth-skimming neutrinos that interact near the Earth's
limb. Presented here is an overview of the sky coverage and ToO scheduler
software for EUSO-SPB2. By using the balloon trajectory coordinates and setting
constraints on the positions of the Sun and Moon to ensure dark skies, we can
determine if and when a source direction is slightly below the Earth's limb.
From a source catalog, CT scheduling and pointing is performed to optimize the
search for high-energy neutrinos coming from astrophysical sources. Some sample
results for EUSO-SPB2 are shown.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, ICRC2023 Conference Proceeding
POEMMA: Probe Of Extreme Multi-Messenger Astrophysics
The Probe Of Extreme Multi-Messenger Astrophysics (POEMMA) mission is being
designed to establish charged-particle astronomy with ultra-high energy cosmic
rays (UHECRs) and to observe cosmogenic tau neutrinos (CTNs). The study of
UHECRs and CTNs from space will yield orders-of-magnitude increase in
statistics of observed UHECRs at the highest energies, and the observation of
the cosmogenic flux of neutrinos for a range of UHECR models. These
observations should solve the long-standing puzzle of the origin of the highest
energy particles ever observed, providing a new window onto the most energetic
environments and events in the Universe, while studying particle interactions
well beyond accelerator energies. The discovery of CTNs will help solve the
puzzle of the origin of UHECRs and begin a new field of Astroparticle Physics
with the study of neutrino properties at ultra-high energies.Comment: 8 pages, in the Proceedings of the 35th International Cosmic Ray
Conference, ICRC217, Busan, Kore
Neutrino propagation in the Earth and emerging charged leptons with
Ultra-high-energy neutrinos serve as messengers of some of the highest energy
astrophysical environments. Given that neutrinos are neutral and only interact
via weak interactions, neutrinos can emerge from sources, traverse astronomical
distances, and point back to their origins. Their weak interactions require
large target volumes for neutrino detection. Using the Earth as a neutrino
converter, terrestrial, sub-orbital, and satellite-based instruments are able
to detect signals of neutrino-induced extensive air showers. In this paper, we
describe the software code that simulates tau neutrino and
muon neutrino interactions in the Earth and predicts the spectrum of the
-lepton and muons that emerge. The outputs are lookup
tables of charged lepton exit probabilities and energies that can be used
directly or as inputs to the code designed to simulate
optical and radio signals from extensive air showers induced by the emerging
charged leptons. We describe the inputs to the code, demonstrate its
flexibility and show selected results for -lepton and muon exit
probabilities and energy distributions. The code is open
source, available on github.Comment: 42 pages, 21 figures, code available at
https://github.com/NuSpaceSim/nupypro
The POEMMA (Probe of Extreme Multi-Messenger Astrophysics) mission
The Probe Of Extreme Multi-Messenger Astrophysics (POEMMA) is designed to
observe cosmic neutrinos (CNs) above 20 PeV and ultra-high energy cosmic rays
(UHECRs) above 20 EeV over the full sky. The POEMMA mission calls for two
identical satellites flying in loose formation, each comprised of a 4-meter
wide field-of-view (45 degrees) Schmidt photometer. The hybrid focal surface
includes a fast (1 s) ultraviolet camera for fluorescence observations
and an ultrafast (10 ns) optical camera for Cherenkov observations. POEMMA will
provide new multi-messenger windows onto the most energetic events in the
universe, enabling the study of new astrophysics and particle physics at these
otherwise inaccessible energies.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, presented in 36th International Cosmic Ray
Conference (Madison). arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1907.0621
The Giant Radio Array for Neutrino Detection (GRAND) Project
The GRAND project aims to detect ultra-high-energy neutrinos, cosmic rays and gamma rays, with an array of 200,000 radio antennas over 200,000km, split into ∼20 sub-arrays of ∼10,000km deployed worldwide. The strategy of GRAND is to detect air showers above 10\,eV that are induced by the interaction of ultra-high-energy particles in the atmosphere or in the Earth crust, through its associated coherent radio-emission in the 50−200\,MHz range. In its final configuration, GRAND plans to reach a neutrino-sensitivity of ∼10GeVcmssr above 5×10\,eV combined with a sub-degree angular resolution. GRANDProto300, the 300-antenna pathfinder array, is planned to start data-taking in 2021. It aims at demonstrating autonomous radio detection of inclined air-showers, and study cosmic rays around the transition between Galactic and extra-Galactic sources. We present preliminary designs and simulation results, plans for the ongoing, staged approach to construction, and the rich research program made possible by the proposed sensitivity and angular resolution
The Giant Radio Array for Neutrino Detection (GRAND) Project
The GRAND project aims to detect ultra-high-energy neutrinos, cosmic rays and gamma rays, with an array of 200,000 radio antennas over 200,000km, split into ∼20 sub-arrays of ∼10,000km deployed worldwide. The strategy of GRAND is to detect air showers above 10eV that are induced by the interaction of ultra-high-energy particles in the atmosphere or in the Earth crust, through its associated coherent radio-emission in the 50−200MHz range. In its final configuration, GRAND plans to reach a neutrino-sensitivity of ∼10GeV cmssr above 5×10eV combined with a sub-degree angular resolution. GRANDProto300, the 300-antenna pathfinder array, is planned to start data-taking in 2021. It aims at demonstrating autonomous radio detection of inclined air-showers, and study cosmic rays around the transition between Galactic and extra-Galactic sources. We present preliminary designs and simulation results, plans for the ongoing, staged approach to construction, and the rich research program made possible by the proposed sensitivity and angular resolution
EuCAPT White Paper: Opportunities and Challenges for Theoretical Astroparticle Physics in the Next Decade
Astroparticle physics is undergoing a profound transformation, due to a
series of extraordinary new results, such as the discovery of high-energy
cosmic neutrinos with IceCube, the direct detection of gravitational waves with
LIGO and Virgo, and many others. This white paper is the result of a
collaborative effort that involved hundreds of theoretical astroparticle
physicists and cosmologists, under the coordination of the European Consortium
for Astroparticle Theory (EuCAPT). Addressed to the whole astroparticle physics
community, it explores upcoming theoretical opportunities and challenges for
our field of research, with particular emphasis on the possible synergies among
different subfields, and the prospects for solving the most fundamental open
questions with multi-messenger observations.Comment: White paper of the European Consortium for Astroparticle Theory
(EuCAPT). 135 authors, 400 endorsers, 133 pages, 1382 reference
Self-trigger radio prototype array for GRAND
The GRANDProto300 (GP300) array is a pathfinder for the Giant Radio Array for Neutrino Detection (GRAND) project. The deployment of the array, consisting of 300 antennas, will start in 2021 in a radio-quiet area of ~200 km2 near Lenghu (~3000 m a.s.l.) in China.
Serving as a test bench, the GP300 array is expected to pioneer techniques of autonomous radio detection including identification and reconstruction of nearly horizontal cosmic-ray (CR) air showers. In addition, the GP300 array is at a privileged position to study the transition between Galactic and extragalactic origins of cosmic rays, due to its large effective area and the precise measurements of both energy and mass composition for CRs with energies ranging from 30 PeV to 1 EeV. Using the GP300 array we will also investigate the potential sensitivity for radio transients such as Giant Radio Pulses and Fast Radio Bursts in the 50-200 MHz range
EUSO-SPB1 mission and science
The Extreme Universe Space Observatory on a Super Pressure Balloon 1 (EUSO-SPB1) was launched in 2017 April from Wanaka, New Zealand. The plan of this mission of opportunity on a NASA super pressure balloon test flight was to circle the southern hemisphere. The primary scientific goal was to make the first observations of ultra-high-energy cosmic-ray extensive air showers (EASs) by looking down on the atmosphere with an ultraviolet (UV) fluorescence telescope from suborbital altitude (33 km). After 12 days and 4 h aloft, the flight was terminated prematurely in the Pacific Ocean. Before the flight, the instrument was tested extensively in the West Desert of Utah, USA, with UV point sources and lasers. The test results indicated that the instrument had sensitivity to EASs of ⪆ 3 EeV. Simulations of the telescope system, telescope on time, and realized flight trajectory predicted an observation of about 1 event assuming clear sky conditions. The effects of high clouds were estimated to reduce this value by approximately a factor of 2. A manual search and a machine-learning-based search did not find any EAS signals in these data. Here we review the EUSO-SPB1 instrument and flight and the EAS search
EUSO-SPB2 Telescope Optics and Testing
The Extreme Universe Space Observatory - Super Pressure Balloon (EUSO-SPB2) mission will fly two custom telescopes that feature Schmidt optics to measure Cherenkov- and fluorescence emission of extensive air showers from cosmic rays at the PeV and EeV-scale, and search for τ-neutrinos. Both telescopes have 1-meter diameter apertures and UV/UV-visible sensitivity. The Cherenkov telescope uses a bifocal mirror segment alignment, to distinguish between a direct cosmic ray that hits the camera versus the Cherenkov light from outside the telescope. Telescope integration and laboratory calibration will be performed in Colorado. To estimate the point spread function and efficiency of the integrated telescopes, a test beam system that delivers a 1-meter diameter parallel beam of light is being fabricated. End-to-end tests of the fully integrated instruments will be carried out in a field campaign at dark sites in the Utah desert using cosmic rays, stars, and artificial light sources. Laser tracks have long been used to characterize the performance of fluorescence detectors in the field. For EUSO-SPB2 an improvement in the method that includes a correction for aerosol attenuation is anticipated by using a bi-dynamic Lidar configuration in which both the laser and the telescope are steerable. We plan to conduct these field tests in Fall 2021 and Spring 2022 to accommodate the scheduled launch of EUSO-SPB2 in 2023 from Wanaka, New Zealand
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