1,051 research outputs found
Simulation of radio emission from air showers in atmospheric electric fields
We study the effect of atmospheric electric fields on the radio pulse emitted
by cosmic ray air showers. Under fair weather conditions the dominant part of
the radio emission is driven by the geomagnetic field. When the shower charges
are accelerated and deflected in an electric field additional radiation is
emitted. We simulate this effect with the Monte Carlo code REAS2, using
CORSIKA-simulated showers as input. In both codes a routine has been
implemented that treats the effect of the electric field on the shower
particles. We find that the radio pulse is significantly altered in background
fields of the order of ~100 V/cm and higher. Practically, this means that air
showers passing through thunderstorms emit radio pulses that are not a reliable
measure for the shower energy. Under other weather circumstances significant
electric field effects are expected to occur rarely, but nimbostratus clouds
can harbor fields that are large enough. In general, the contribution of the
electric field to the radio pulse has polarization properties that are
different from the geomagnetic pulse. In order to filter out radio pulses that
have been affected by electric field effects, radio air shower experiments
should keep weather information and perform full polarization measurements of
the radio signal.Comment: 26 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in Astroparticle
Physic
Monte Carlo simulations of air showers in atmospheric electric fields
The development of cosmic ray air showers can be influenced by atmospheric
electric fields. Under fair weather conditions these fields are small, but the
strong fields inside thunderstorms can have a significant effect on the
electromagnetic component of a shower. Understanding this effect is
particularly important for radio detection of air showers, since the radio
emission is produced by the shower electrons and positrons. We perform Monte
Carlo simulations to calculate the effects of different electric field
configurations on the shower development. We find that the electric field
becomes important for values of the order of 1 kV/cm. Not only can the energy
distribution of electrons and positrons change significantly for such field
strengths, it is also possible that runaway electron breakdown occurs at high
altitudes, which is an important effect in lightning initiation.Comment: 24 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in Astroparticle
Physic
Cosmic-ray energy spectrum and composition up to the ankle - the case for a second Galactic component
We have carried out a detailed study to understand the observed energy
spectrum and composition of cosmic rays with energies up to ~10^18 eV. Our
study shows that a single Galactic component with subsequent energy cut-offs in
the individual spectra of different elements, optimised to explain the observed
spectra below ~10^14 eV and the knee in the all-particle spectrum, cannot
explain the observed all-particle spectrum above ~2x10^16 eV. We discuss two
approaches for a second component of Galactic cosmic rays -- re-acceleration at
a Galactic wind termination shock, and supernova explosions of Wolf-Rayet
stars, and show that the latter scenario can explain almost all observed
features in the all-particle spectrum and the composition up to ~10^18 eV, when
combined with a canonical extra-galactic spectrum expected from strong radio
galaxies or a source population with similar cosmological evolution. In this
two-component Galactic model, the knee at ~ 3x10^15 eV and the second knee at
~10^17 eV in the all-particle spectrum are due to the cut-offs in the first and
second components, respectively. We also discuss several variations of the
extra-galactic component, from a minimal contribution to scenarios with a
significant component below the ankle (at ~4x10^18 eV), and find that
extra-galactic contributions in excess of regular source evolution are neither
indicated nor in conflict with the existing data. Our main result is that the
second Galactic component predicts a composition of Galactic cosmic rays at and
above the second knee that largely consists of helium or a mixture of helium
and CNO nuclei, with a weak or essentially vanishing iron fraction, in contrast
to most common assumptions. This prediction is in agreement with new
measurements from LOFAR and the Pierre Auger Observatory which indicate a
strong light component and a rather low iron fraction between ~10^17 and 10^18
eV.Comment: Added Table 4; Published in A&A, 595 (2016) A33 (Highlight paper
A new limit on the Ultra-High-Energy Cosmic-Ray flux with the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope
A particle cascade (shower) in a dielectric, for example as initiated by an
ultra-high energy cosmic ray, will have an excess of electrons which will emit
coherent \v{C}erenkov radiation, known as the Askaryan effect. In this work we
study the case in which such a particle shower occurs in a medium just below
its surface. We show, for the first time, that the radiation transmitted
through the surface is independent of the depth of the shower below the surface
when observed from far away, apart from trivial absorption effects. As a direct
application we use the recent results of the NuMoon project, where a limit on
the neutrino flux for energies above \,eV was set using the Westerbork
Synthesis Radio Telescope by measuring pulsed radio emission from the Moon, to
set a limit on the flux of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
INCREASING PATIENT DEMAND FOR HOME MEDICINES REVIEWS: A MARKETING PLAN
Campbell (2008)stated that “Consumer awareness of the program is of major concern” and concluded that “all stakeholders agreed that the Home Medicines Review (HMR) Program should be promoted more to consumers and carers.” Schwartzkoff et al (2004) recommended the implementation of a “national public awareness campaign to strengthen demand for HMR services from consumers who are likely to benefit”. Our research study (White & Clark, 2010; see poster 2) found that: There is very low awareness of HMRs amongst eligible non-recipient patients and carers There is an extremely high level of satisfaction amongst those who have experienced an HMR and very positive perceptions amongst those eligible patients and carers who have not had an HMR, after being informed of the service through the study.The goal of the marketing plan is to increase patient demand for HMRs by: 1. overcoming the lack of awareness, 2. facilitating patient self identification of eligibility and 3. instituting procedures that enhance the uptake of second and subsequent HMRs by HMR recipients where appropriate. All marketing strategies must be carefully targeted in order to attract only patients who meet the HMR eligibility criteria.Pharmacy Guild of Australi
Polarized radio emission from extensive air showers measured with LOFAR
We present LOFAR measurements of radio emission from extensive air showers.
We find that this emission is strongly polarized, with a median degree of
polarization of nearly , and that the angle between the polarization
direction of the electric field and the Lorentz force acting on the particles,
depends on the observer location in the shower plane. This can be understood as
a superposition of the radially polarized charge-excess emission mechanism,
first proposed by Askaryan and the geomagnetic emission mechanism proposed by
Kahn and Lerche. We calculate the relative strengths of both contributions, as
quantified by the charge-excess fraction, for individual air showers. We
find that the measured charge-excess fraction is higher for air showers
arriving from closer to the zenith. Furthermore, the measured charge-excess
fraction also increases with increasing observer distance from the air shower
symmetry axis. The measured values range from for very
inclined air showers at to for almost
vertical showers at . Both dependencies are in qualitative
agreement with theoretical predictions.Comment: 22 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in JCA
The radio emission pattern of air showers as measured with LOFAR - a tool for the reconstruction of the energy and the shower maximum
The pattern of the radio emission of air showers is finely sampled with the
Low-Frequency ARray (LOFAR). A set of 382 measured air showers is used to test
a fast, analytic parameterization of the distribution of pulse powers. Using
this parameterization we are able to reconstruct the shower axis and give
estimators for the energy of the air shower as well as the distance to the
shower maximum.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in JCA
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