223 research outputs found
Properties of an ionization spectrometer exposed to 10, 20.5, and 28 GeV/c machine accelerated protons
Properties of ionization spectrometer exposed to 10, 20.5, and 28 GeV/c synchrotron accelerated proton
Neutrino, Neutron, and Cosmic Ray Production in the External Shock Model of Gamma Ray Bursts
The hypothesis that ultra-high energy (>~ 10^19 eV) cosmic rays (UHECRs) are
accelerated by gamma-ray burst (GRB) blast waves is assumed to be correct.
Implications of this assumption are then derived for the external shock model
of gamma-ray bursts. The evolving synchrotron radiation spectrum in GRB blast
waves provides target photons for the photomeson production of neutrinos and
neutrons. Decay characteristics and radiative efficiencies of the neutral
particles that escape from the blast wave are calculated. The diffuse
high-energy GRB neutrino background and the distribution of high-energy GRB
neutrino events are calculated for specific parameter sets, and a scaling
relation for the photomeson production efficiency in surroundings with
different densities is derived. GRBs provide an intense flux of high-energy
neutrons, with neutron-production efficiencies exceeding ~ 1% of the total
energy release. The radiative characteristics of the neutron beta-decay
electrons from the GRB "neutron bomb" are solved in a special case. Galaxies
with GRB activity should be surrounded by radiation halos of ~ 100 kpc extent
from the outflowing neutrons, consisting of a nonthermal optical/X-ray
synchrotron component and a high-energy gamma-ray component from
Compton-scattered microwave background radiation. The luminosity of sources of
GRBs and relativistic outflows in L* galaxies such as the Milky Way is at the
level of ~10^40+-1 ergs/s. This is sufficient to account for UHECR generation
by GRBs. We briefly speculate on the possibility that hadronic cosmic rays
originate from the subset of supernovae that collapse to form relativistic
outflows and GRBs. (abridged)Comment: 53 pages, 8 figures, ApJ, in press, 574, July 20, 2002. Substantial
revision, previous Appendix expanded to ApJ, 556, 479; cosmic ray origin
speculations to Heidelberg (astro-ph/001054) and Hamburg ICRC
(astro-ph/0202254) proceeding
Gravitational-wave research as an emerging field in the Max Planck Society. The long roots of GEO600 and of the Albert Einstein Institute
On the occasion of the 50th anniversary since the beginning of the search for
gravitational waves at the Max Planck Society, and in coincidence with the 25th
anniversary of the foundation of the Albert Einstein Institute, we explore the
interplay between the renaissance of general relativity and the advent of
relativistic astrophysics following the German early involvement in
gravitational-wave research, to the point when gravitational-wave detection
became established by the appearance of full-scale detectors and international
collaborations. On the background of the spectacular astrophysical discoveries
of the 1960s and the growing role of relativistic astrophysics, Ludwig Biermann
and his collaborators at the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics in Munich
became deeply involved in research related to such new horizons. At the end of
the 1960s, Joseph Weber's announcements claiming detection of gravitational
waves sparked the decisive entry of this group into the field, in parallel with
the appointment of the renowned relativist Juergen Ehlers. The Munich area
group of Max Planck institutes provided the fertile ground for acquiring a
leading position in the 1970s, facilitating the experimental transition from
resonant bars towards laser interferometry and its innovation at increasingly
large scales, eventually moving to a dedicated site in Hannover in the early
1990s. The Hannover group emphasized perfecting experimental systems at pilot
scales, and never developed a full-sized detector, rather joining the LIGO
Scientific Collaboration at the end of the century. In parallel, the Max Planck
Institute for Gravitational Physics (Albert Einstein Institute) had been
founded in Potsdam, and both sites, in Hannover and Potsdam, became a unified
entity in the early 2000s and were central contributors to the first detection
of gravitational waves in 2015.Comment: 94 pages. Enlarged version including new results from further
archival research. A previous version appears as a chapter in the volume The
Renaissance of General Relativity in Context, edited by A. Blum, R. Lalli and
J. Renn (Boston: Birkhauser, 2020
Measuring extensive air showers with Cherenkov light detectors of the Yakutsk array: The energy spectrum of cosmic rays
The energy spectrum of cosmic rays in the range 10^15 eV to 6*10^19 eV has
been studied using the air Cherenkov light detectors of the Yakutsk array. The
total flux of photons produced by relativistic electrons (including positrons
as well, hereafter) of extensive air showers in the atmosphere is used as the
energy estimator of the primary particle initiating a shower. The resultant
differential flux of cosmic rays exhibits, in accordance with previous
measurements, a knee and ankle features at energies 3*10^15 and ~10^19 eV,
respectively. A comparison of observational data with simulations is made in
the knee and ankle regions in order to choose the models of galactic and
extragalactic components of cosmic rays which describe better the energy
spectrum measured.Comment: 27 pages, 22 figures, accepted for publication in New Journal of
Physics (Focus Issue
Gamma ray astrophysics: the EGRET results
Cosmic gamma rays provide insight into some of the most dynamic processes in
the Universe. At the dawn of a new generation of gamma-ray telescopes, this
review summarizes results from the Energetic Gamma Ray Experiment Telescope
(EGRET) on the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory, the principal predecessor mission
studying high-energy photons in the 100 MeV energy range. EGRET viewed a
gamma-ray sky dominated by prominent emission from the Milky Way, but featuring
an array of other sources, including quasars, pulsars, gamma-ray bursts, and
many sources that remain unidentified. A central feature of the EGRET results
was the high degree of variability seen in many gamma-ray sources, indicative
of the powerful forces at work in objects visible to gamma-ray telescopes.Comment: 23 pages, 24 figure
Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope: High-Energy Results from the First Year
The Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope (Fermi) was launched on June 11, 2008 and
began its first year sky survey on August 11, 2008. The Large Area Telescope
(LAT), a wide field-of-view pair-conversion telescope covering the energy range
from 20 MeV to more than 300 GeV, is the primary instrument on Fermi. While
this review focuses on results obtained with the LAT, the Gamma-ray Burst
Monitor (GBM) complements the LAT in its observations of transient sources and
is sensitive to X-rays and gamma-rays with energies between 8 keV and 40 MeV.
During the first year in orbit, the Fermi LAT has observed a large number of
sources that include active galaxies, pulsars, compact binaries, globular
clusters, supernova remnants, as well as the Sun, the Moon and the Earth. The
GBM and LAT together have uncovered surprising characteristics in the
high-energy emission of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) that have been used to set
significant new limits on violations of Lorentz invariance. The Fermi LAT has
also made important new measurements of the Galactic diffuse radiation and has
made precise measurements of the spectrum of cosmic-ray electrons and positrons
from 20 GeV to 1 TeV.Comment: 39 pages, 16 figure
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