405 research outputs found
A Monte Carlo simulation study for cosmic-ray chemical composition measurement with Cherenkov Telescope Array
Our Galaxy is filled with cosmic-ray particles and more than 98% of them are
atomic nuclei. In order to clarify their origin and acceleration mechanism,
chemical composition measurements of these cosmic rays with wide energy
coverage play an important role. Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescope (IACT)
arrays are designed to detect cosmic gamma-rays in the very-high-energy regime
(TeV). Recently these systems proved to be capable of measuring
cosmic-ray chemical composition in the sub-PeV region by capturing direct
Cherenkov photons emitted by charged primary particles. Extensive air shower
profiles measured by IACTs also contain information about the primary particle
type since the cross section of inelastic scattering in the air depends on the
primary mass number. The Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) is the next generation
IACT system, which will consist of multiple types of telescopes and have a
km-scale footprint and extended energy coverage (20 GeV to 300 TeV). In
order to estimate CTA potential for cosmic ray composition measurement, a full
Monte Carlo simulation including a description of extensive air shower and
detector response is needed. We generated a number of cosmic-ray nuclei events
(8 types selected from H to Fe) for a specific CTA layout candidate in the
southern-hemisphere site. We applied Direct Cherenkov event selection and
shower profile analysis to these data and preliminary results on charge number
resolution and expected event count rate for these cosmic-ray nuclei are
presented.Comment: All CTA contributions at arXiv:1709.03483 , Proceedings of the 35th
International Cosmic Ray Conferenc
Approximate Solutions of Mathematical Models of Supercooling Solidification
In [1], [2], some one-dimensional mathematical models of supercooling solidification have been established, and some existence theorems have been proven by a difference method. In this paper, the models and the method are shown again in §§ 1, 2 and another analytic method of approximate solution is proposed in § 3. It is based on the assumption that a profile of temperature distribution at any time may be considered linear in every inner region. By some numerical examples, solutions by the approximate method are compared with some solutions given by the difference method. It is then realized that the approximate solutions come sufficiently close to the difference solutions
Electron acceleration with improved Stochastic Differential Equation method: cutoff shape of electron distribution in test-particle limit
We develop a method of stochastic differential equation to simulate electron
acceleration at astrophysical shocks. Our method is based on It\^{o}'s
stochastic differential equations coupled with a particle splitting, employing
a skew Brownian motion where an asymmetric shock crossing probability is
considered. Using this code, we perform simulations of electron acceleration at
stationary plane parallel shock with various parameter sets, and studied how
the cutoff shape, which is characterized by cutoff shape parameter , changes
with the momentum dependence of the diffusion coefficient . In the
age-limited cases, we reproduce previous results of other authors,
. In the cooling-limited cases, the analytical expectation
is roughly reproduced although we recognize deviations to
some extent. In the case of escape-limited acceleration, numerical result fits
analytical stationary solution well, but deviates from the previous asymptotic
analytical formula .Comment: corrected typos, 10 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables, JHEAp in pres
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