884 research outputs found
Experiment Pamir-4: Analysis of superfamily with halo of electromagnetic nature detected in deep XEC
The family Pb2-11 was detected in the multilayer lead XEC with total thickness of 100 c.u. exposed at the Pamirs. Each lead layer was 1 cm thick, the first registering layer being located under 2 cm of Pb(= 4 c.u.). The family comprised a narrow group of gamma-rays which near the maximum of cascade development (= 14 c.u.) produced a dark spot of optical density D approx. .4 over area S = 25 sq.mm. The narrow group of gamma-rays was traced up to 14th layer corresponding to 30 c.u. Deeper in the chamber, for the space of 70 c.u. no hadron cascade was observed. Thus, the pure electromagnetic halo could be assumed. Preliminary results of the analysis of the family Pb2-11 was presented. The methods of estimation of energy of primary particle and height of nuclear interaction responsible for the observed halo are considered in more detail
Experiment Pamir-2. Fianit: A giant super-family with halo (Epsilon sub 0 at approximately 10(17) eV)
A superfamily with halo of extremely high energy named Fianit was recorded in X-ray emulsion chamber (XEC) at the Pamirs (atmospheric depth 600 g/sq.cm.). Detailed description of the superfamily and results of its analysis are presented
Limits on Neutron Lorentz Violation from the Stability of Primary Cosmic Ray Protons
Recent evidence appears to confirm that the ultra-high-energy primary cosmic
ray spectrum consists mostly of protons. The fact that these protons can
traverse large distances to reach Earth allows us to place bounds on Lorentz
violations. The protons neither emit vacuum Cerenkov radiation nor
-decay into neutrons, and this constrains six previously unmeasured
coefficients in the neutron sector at the 5 x 10^(-14) level. Among the
coefficients bounded here for the first time are those that control
spin-independent boost anisotropy for neutrons. This is a phenomenon which
could have existed (in light of the preexisting bounds) without additional fine
tuning. There are also similar bounds for others species of hadrons. The bounds
on Lorentz violation for neutral pions are particularly strong, at the 4 x
10^(-21) level, eleven orders of magnitude better than previous constraints.Comment: 13 pages, version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Minimal Cosmogenic Neutrinos
The observed flux of ultra-high energy (UHE) cosmic rays (CRs) guarantees the
presence of high-energy cosmogenic neutrinos that are produced via
photo-hadronic interactions of CRs propagating through intergalactic space.
This flux of neutrinos doesn't share the many uncertainties associated with the
environment of the yet unknown CR sources. Cosmogenic neutrinos have
nevertheless a strong model dependence associated with the chemical
composition, source distribution or evolution and maximal injection energy of
UHE CRs. We discuss a lower limit on the cosmogenic neutrino spectrum which
depends on the observed UHE CR spectrum and composition and relates directly to
experimentally observable and model-independent quantities. We show explicit
limits for conservative assumptions about the source evolution.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Early Results from TUS, the First Orbital Detector of Extreme Energy Cosmic Rays
TUS is the world's first orbital detector of extreme energy cosmic rays
(EECRs), which operates as a part of the scientific payload of the Lomonosov
satellite since May 19, 2016. TUS employs the nocturnal atmosphere of the Earth
to register ultraviolet (UV) fluorescence and Cherenkov radiation from
extensive air showers generated by EECRs as well as UV radiation from lightning
strikes and transient luminous events, micro-meteors and space debris. The
first months of its operation in orbit have demonstrated an unexpectedly rich
variety of UV radiation in the atmosphere. We briefly review the design of TUS
and present a few examples of events recorded in a mode dedicated to
registering EECRs.Comment: 8 pages, to appear in the proceedings of UHECR2016, Kyoto, 11-14
October 2016; version 2: minor changes following referee's suggestions;
version 3: typo in the caption of Fig.2 fixe
Asymptotic approach to Special Relativity compatible with a relativistic principle
We propose a general framework to describe Planckian deviations from Special
Relativity (SR) compatible with a relativistic principle. They are introduced
as the leading corrections in an asymptotic approach to SR going beyond the
energy power expansion of effective field theories. We discuss the conditions
in which these Planckian effects might be experimentally observable in the near
future, together with the non-trivial limits of applicability of this
asymptotic approach that such a situation would produce, both at the very high
(ultraviolet) and the very low (infrared) energy regimes.Comment: 12 page
Gluino Air Showers as a Signal of Split Supersymmetry
It has been proposed recently that, within the framework of split
Supersymmetry, long lived gluinos generated in astrophysical sources could be
detected using the signatures of the air showers they produce, thus providing a
lower bound for their lifetime and for the scale of SUSY breaking. We present
the longitudinal profile and lateral spread of -hadron induced extensive air
showers and consider the possibility of measuring them with a detector with the
characteristics of the Pierre Auger Observatory.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figure
Constraints on the origin of the ultra-high energy cosmic-rays using cosmic diffuse neutrino flux limits: An analytical approach
Astrophysical neutrinos are expected to be produced in the interactions of
ultra-high energy cosmic-rays with surrounding photons. The fluxes of the
astrophysical neutrinos are highly dependent on the characteristics of the
cosmic-ray sources, such as their cosmological distributions. We study possible
constraints on the properties of cosmic-ray sources in a model-independent way
using experimentally obtained diffuse neutrino flux above 100 PeV. The
semi-analytic formula is derived to estimate the cosmogenic neutrino fluxes as
functions of source evolution parameter and source extension in redshift. The
obtained formula converts the upper-limits on the neutrino fluxes into the
constraints on the cosmic-ray sources. It is found that the recently obtained
upper-limit on the cosmogenic neutrinos by IceCube constrains the scenarios
with strongly evolving ultra-high energy cosmic-ray sources, and the future
limits from an 1 km^3 scale detector are able to further constrain the
ultra-high energy cosmic-rays sources with evolutions comparable to the cosmic
star formation rate.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures and 1 table. Accepted by Phys. Rev.
Lorentz Violation for Photons and Ultra-High Energy Cosmic Rays
Lorentz symmetry breaking at very high energies may lead to photon dispersion
relations of the form omega^2=k^2+xi_n k^2(k/M_Pl)^n with new terms suppressed
by a power n of the Planck mass M_Pl. We show that first and second order terms
of size xi_1 > 10^(-14) and xi_2 < -10^(-6), respectively, would lead to a
photon component in cosmic rays above 10^(19) eV that should already have been
detected, if corresponding terms for electrons and positrons are significantly
smaller. This suggests that Lorentz invariance breakings suppressed up to
second order in the Planck scale are unlikely to be phenomenologically viable
for photons.Comment: 4 revtex pages, 3 postscript figures included, version published in
PR
Lorentz Violating Inflation
We explore the impact of Lorentz violation on the inflationary scenario. More
precisely, we study the inflationary scenario in the scalar-vector-tensor
theory where the vector is constrained to be unit and time like. It turns out
that the Lorentz violating vector affects the dynamics of the chaotic
inflationary model and divides the inflationary stage into two parts; the
Lorentz violating stage and the standard slow roll stage. We show that the
universe is expanding as an exact de Sitter spacetime in the Lorentz violating
stage although the inflaton field is rolling down the potential. Much more
interestingly, we find exact Lorentz violating inflationary solutions in the
absence of the inflaton potential. In this case, the inflation is completely
associated with the Lorentz violation. We also mention some consequences of
Lorentz violating inflation which can be tested by observations.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
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