328 research outputs found
Dissecting the knee - Air shower measurements with KASCADE
Recent results of the KASCADE air shower experiment are presented in order to
shed some light on the astrophysics of cosmic rays in the region of the knee in
the energy spectrum. The results include investigations of high-energy
interactions in the atmosphere, the analysis of the arrival directions of
cosmic rays, the determination of the mean logarithmic mass, and the unfolding
of energy spectra for elemental groups
KASCADE: Astrophysical results and tests of hadronic interaction models
KASCADE is a multi-detector setup to get redundant information on single air
shower basis. The information is used to perform multiparameter analyses to
solve the threefold problem of the reconstruction of (i)the unknown primary
energy, (ii) the primary mass, and (iii) to quantify the characteristics of the
hadronic interactions in the air-shower development. In this talk recent
results of the KASCADE data analyses are summarized concerning cosmic ray
anisotropy studies, determination of flux spectra for different primary mass
groups, and approaches to test hadronic interaction models. Neither large scale
anisotropies nor point sources were found in the KASCADE data set. The energy
spectra of the light element groups result in a knee-like bending and a
steepening above the knee. The topology of the individual knee positions shows
a dependency on the primary particle. Though no hadronic interaction model is
fully able to describe the multi-parameter data of KASCADE consistently, the
more recent models or improved versions of older models reproduce the data
better than few years ago.Comment: to appear in Nucl. Phys. B (Proc. Suppl.), Proc. of the XIII
ISVHECRI, Pylos 2004 - with a better quality of the figure
Cosmic Ray Energy Spectra and Mass Composition at the Knee - Recent Results from KASCADE -
Recent results from the KASCADE experiment on measurements of cosmic rays in
the energy range of the knee are presented. Emphasis is placed on energy
spectra of individual mass groups as obtained from an two-dimensional unfolding
applied to the reconstructed electron and truncated muon numbers of each
individual EAS. The data show a knee-like structure in the energy spectra of
light primaries (p, He, C) and an increasing dominance of heavy ones (A > 20)
towards higher energies. This basic result is robust against uncertainties of
the applied interaction models QGSJET and SIBYLL which are used in the shower
simulations to analyse the data. Slight differences observed between
experimental data and EAS simulations provide important clues for further
improvements of the interaction models. The data are complemented by new limits
on global anisotropies in the arrival directions of CRs and by upper limits on
point sources. Astrophysical implications for discriminating models of maximum
acceleration energy vs galactic diffusion/drift models of the knee are
discussed based on this data.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, to appear in Nuclear Physics B, Proceedings
Supplements, as part of the volume for the CRIS 2004, Cosmic Ray
International Seminar: GZK and Surrounding
The KASCADE-Grande Experiment and the LOPES Project
KASCADE-Grande is the extension of the multi-detector setup KASCADE to cover
a primary cosmic ray energy range from 100 TeV to 1 EeV. The enlarged EAS
experiment provides comprehensive observations of cosmic rays in the energy
region around the knee. Grande is an array of 700 x 700 sqm equipped with 37
plastic scintillator stations sensitive to measure energy deposits and arrival
times of air shower particles. LOPES is a small radio antenna array to operate
in conjunction with KASCADE-Grande in order to calibrate the radio emission
from cosmic ray air showers. Status and capabilities of the KASCADE-Grande
experiment and the LOPES project are presented.Comment: To appear in Nuclear Physics B, Proceedings Supplements, as part of
the volume for the CRIS 2004, Cosmic Ray International Seminar: GZK and
Surrounding
Radio detection of cosmic ray air showers with LOPES
In the last few years, radio detection of cosmic ray air showers has
experienced a true renaissance, becoming manifest in a number of new
experiments and simulation efforts. In particular, the LOPES project has
successfully implemented modern interferometric methods to measure the radio
emission from extensive air showers. LOPES has confirmed that the emission is
coherent and of geomagnetic origin, as expected by the geosynchrotron
mechanism, and has demonstrated that a large scale application of the radio
technique has great potential to complement current measurements of ultra-high
energy cosmic rays. We describe the current status, most recent results and
open questions regarding radio detection of cosmic rays and give an overview of
ongoing research and development for an application of the radio technique in
the framework of the Pierre Auger Observatory.Comment: 8 pages; Proceedings of the CRIS2006 conference, Catania, Italy; to
be published in Nuclear Physics B, Proceedings Supplement
Comparison of measured and simulated lateral distributions for electrons and muons with KASCADE
Lateral distributions for electrons and muons in extensive air showers
measured with the array of the KASCADE experiment are compared to results of
simulations based on the high-energy hadronic interaction models QGSJet and
SIBYLL. It is shown, that the muon distributions are well described by both
models. Deviations are found for the electromagnetic component, where both
models predict a steeper lateral shape than observed in the data. For both
models the observed lateral shapes of the electron component indicate a
transition from a light to a more heavy composition of the cosmic ray spectrum
above the knee.Comment: 27 pages, accepted for publication in Astropart. Phy
KASCADE measurements of energy spectra for elemental groups of cosmic rays: Results and open problems
A composition analysis of KASCADE air shower data is performed by means of
unfolding the two-dimensional frequency spectrum of electron and muon numbers.
Aim of the analysis is the determination of energy spectra for elemental groups
representing the chemical composition of primary cosmic rays. Since such an
analysis depends crucially on simulations of air showers the two different
hadronic interaction models QGSJet and SIBYLL are used for their generation.
The resulting primary energy spectra show that the knee in the all particle
spectrum is due to a steepening of the spectra of light elements but, also,
that neither of the two simulation sets is able to describe the measured data
consistently over the whole energy range with discrepancies appearing in
different energy regions.Comment: 39 pages, accepted for publication in Astropart. Phy
Pion, kaon, proton and anti-proton transverse momentum distributions from p+p and d+Au collisions at GeV
Identified mid-rapidity particle spectra of , , and
from 200 GeV p+p and d+Au collisions are reported. A
time-of-flight detector based on multi-gap resistive plate chamber technology
is used for particle identification. The particle-species dependence of the
Cronin effect is observed to be significantly smaller than that at lower
energies. The ratio of the nuclear modification factor () between
protons and charged hadrons () in the transverse momentum
range GeV/c is measured to be
(stat)(syst) in minimum-bias collisions and shows little
centrality dependence. The yield ratio of in minimum-bias d+Au
collisions is found to be a factor of 2 lower than that in Au+Au collisions,
indicating that the Cronin effect alone is not enough to account for the
relative baryon enhancement observed in heavy ion collisions at RHIC.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. We extended the pion spectra from
transverse momentum 1.8 GeV/c to 3. GeV/
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