981 research outputs found
Production and propagation of heavy hadrons in air-shower simulators
Very energetic charm and bottom hadrons may be produced in the upper
atmosphere when a primary cosmic ray or the leading hadron in an extensive air
shower collide with a nucleon. At GeV their decay length
becomes of the order of 10 km, implying that they tend to interact in the air
instead of decaying. Since the inelasticity in these collisions is much smaller
than the one in proton and pion collisions, there could be rare events where a
heavy-hadron component transports a significant amount of energy deep into the
atmosphere. We have developed a module for the detailed simulation of these
processes and have included it in a new version of the air shower simulator
AIRES. We study the frequency, the energy distribution and the depth of charm
and bottom production, as well as the depth and the energy distribution of
these quarks when they decay. As an illustration, we consider the production
and decay of tau leptons (from decays) and the lepton flux at PeV
energies from a 30 EeV proton primary. The proper inclusion of charm and bottom
hadrons in AIRES opens the possibility to search for air-shower observables
that are sensitive to heavy quark effects.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astroparticle Physic
Hadronic interactions models beyond collider energies
Studies of the influence of different hadronic models on extensive air
showers at ultra-high energies are presented. The hadronic models considered
are those implemented in the well-known QGSJET and SIBYLL event generators. The
different approaches used in both codes to model the underlying physics is
analyzed using computer simulations performed with the program AIRES. The most
relevant observables for both single collisions and air showers are studied for
primary energies ranging from eV up to eV. In addition,
the evolution of lateral and energy distributions during the shower development
is presented. Our analysis seems to indicate that the behaviour of shower
observables does not largely reflect the strong differences observed in single
collisions.Comment: 31 RevTex pages - 14 ps figure
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