136 research outputs found
Performance of the ARIANNA Hexagonal Radio Array
Installation of the ARIANNA Hexagonal Radio Array (HRA) on the Ross Ice Shelf
of Antarctica has been completed. This detector serves as a pilot program to
the ARIANNA neutrino telescope, which aims to measure the diffuse flux of very
high energy neutrinos by observing the radio pulse generated by
neutrino-induced charged particle showers in the ice. All HRA stations ran
reliably and took data during the entire 2014-2015 austral summer season. A new
radio signal direction reconstruction procedure is described, and is observed
to have a resolution better than a degree. The reconstruction is used in a
preliminary search for potential neutrino candidate events in the data from one
of the newly installed detector stations. Three cuts are used to separate radio
backgrounds from neutrino signals. The cuts are found to filter out all data
recorded by the station during the season while preserving 85.4% of simulated
neutrino events that trigger the station. This efficiency is similar to that
found in analyses of previous HRA data taking seasons.Comment: Proceedings from the 34th ICRC2015, http://icrc2015.nl/ . 8 pages, 6
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A First Search for Cosmogenic Neutrinos with the ARIANNA Hexagonal Radio Array
The ARIANNA experiment seeks to observe the diffuse flux of neutrinos in the
10^8 - 10^10 GeV energy range using a grid of radio detectors at the surface of
the Ross Ice Shelf of Antarctica. The detector measures the coherent Cherenkov
radiation produced at radio frequencies, from about 100 MHz to 1 GHz, by
charged particle showers generated by neutrino interactions in the ice. The
ARIANNA Hexagonal Radio Array (HRA) is being constructed as a prototype for the
full array. During the 2013-14 austral summer, three HRA stations collected
radio data which was wirelessly transmitted off site in nearly real-time. The
performance of these stations is described and a simple analysis to search for
neutrino signals is presented. The analysis employs a set of three cuts that
reject background triggers while preserving 90% of simulated cosmogenic
neutrino triggers. No neutrino candidates are found in the data and a
model-independent 90% confidence level Neyman upper limit is placed on the all
flavor neutrino+antineutrino flux in a sliding decade-wide energy bin. The
limit reaches a minimum of 1.9x10^-23 GeV^-1 cm^-2 s^-1 sr^-1 in the 10^8.5 -
10^9.5 GeV energy bin. Simulations of the performance of the full detector are
also described. The sensitivity of the full ARIANNA experiment is presented and
compared with current neutrino flux models.Comment: 22 pages, 22 figures. Published in Astroparticle Physic
Livetime and sensitivity of the ARIANNA Hexagonal Radio Array
The ARIANNA collaboration completed the installation of the hexagonal radio
array (HRA) in December 2014, serving as a pilot program for a planned high
energy neutrino telescope located about 110 km south of McMurdo Station on the
Ross Ice Shelf near the coast of Antarctica. The goal of ARIANNA is to measure
both diffuse and point fluxes of astrophysical neutrinos at energies in excess
of 1016 eV. Upgraded hardware has been installed during the 2014 deployment
season and stations show a livetime of better than 90% between commissioning
and austral sunset. Though designed to observe radio pulses from neutrino
interactions originating within the ice below each detector, one station was
modified to study the low-frequency environment and signals from above. We
provide evidence that the HRA observed both continuous emission from the Galaxy
and a transient solar burst. Preliminary work on modeling the (weak) Galactic
signal confirm the absolute sensitivity of the HRA detector system.Comment: Proceedings from the 34th ICRC2015, http://icrc2015.nl/, 8 pages, 6
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Observation of classically `forbidden' electromagnetic wave propagation and implications for neutrino detection
Ongoing experimental efforts in Antarctica seek to detect ultra-high energy
neutrinos by measurement of radio-frequency (RF) Askaryan radiation generated
by the collision of a neutrino with an ice molecule. An array of RF antennas,
deployed either in-ice or in-air, is used to infer the properties of the
neutrino. To evaluate their experimental sensitivity, such experiments require
a refractive index model for ray tracing radio-wave trajectories from a
putative in-ice neutrino interaction point to the receiving antennas; this
gives the degree of signal absorption or ray bending from source to receiver.
The gradient in the density profile over the upper 200 meters of Antarctic ice,
coupled with Fermat's least-time principle, implies ray "bending" and the
existence of "forbidden" zones for predominantly horizontal signal propagation
at shallow depths. After re-deriving the formulas describing such shadowing, we
report on experimental results that, somewhat unexpectedly, demonstrate the
existence of electromagnetic wave transport modes from nominally shadowed
regions. The fact that this shadow-signal propagation is observed both at South
Pole and the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica suggests that the effect may be a
generic property of polar ice, with potentially important implications for
experiments seeking to detect neutrinos.Comment: 33 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in JCA
Radar absorption, basal reflection, thickness and polarization measurements from the Ross Ice Shelf, Antarctica
Radio-glaciological parameters from the Moore’s Bay region of the Ross Ice Shelf, Antarctica, have been measured. The thickness of the ice shelf in Moore’s Bay was measured from reflection times of radio-frequency pulses propagating vertically through the shelf and reflecting from the ocean, and is found to be 576 ± 8 m. Introducing a baseline of 543 ± 7m between radio transmitter and receiver allowed the computation of the basal reflection coefficient, R, separately from englacial loss. The depth-averaged attenuation length of the ice column, 〈L〉 is shown to depend linearly on frequency. The best fit (95% confidence level) is 〈L(ν)〉= (460±20) − (180±40)ν m (20 dB km−1), for the frequencies ν = [0.100–0.850] GHz, assuming no reflection loss. The mean electric-field reflection coefficient is (1.7 dB reflection loss) across [0.100–0.850] GHz, and is used to correct the attenuation length. Finally, the reflected power rotated into the orthogonal antenna polarization i
Design and Performance of the ARIANNA Hexagonal Radio Array Systems
We report on the development, installation and operation of the first three
of seven stations deployed at the ARIANNA site's pilot Hexagonal Radio Array in
Antarctica. The primary goal of the ARIANNA project is to observe ultra-high
energy (>100 PeV) cosmogenic neutrino signatures using a large array of
autonomous stations each dispersed 1 km apart on the surface of the Ross Ice
Shelf. Sensing radio emissions of 100 MHz to 1 GHz, each station in the array
contains RF antennas, amplifiers, 1.92 G-sample/s, 850 MHz bandwidth signal
acquisition circuitry, pattern-matching trigger capabilities, an embedded CPU,
32 GB of solid-state data storage, and long-distance wireless and satellite
communications. Power is provided by the sun and LiFePO4 storage batteries, and
the stations consume an average of 7W of power. Operation on solar power has
resulted in >=58% per calendar-year live-time. The station's pattern-trigger
capabilities reduce the trigger rates to a few milli-Hertz with 4-sigma
thresholds while retaining good stability and high efficiency for neutrino
signals. The timing resolution of the station has been found to be 0.049 ps,
RMS, and the angular precision of event reconstructions of signals bounced off
of the sea-ice interface of the Ross Ice Shelf ranged from 0.14 to 0.17
degrees. A new fully-synchronous 2+ G-sample/s, 1.5 GHz bandwidth 4-channel
signal acquisition chip with deeper memory and flexible >600 MHz, <1 mV RMS
sensitivity triggering has been designed and incorporated into a single-board
data acquisition and control system that uses an average of only 1.7W of power.
Along with updated amplifiers, these new systems are expected to be deployed
during the 2014-2015 Austral summer to complete the Hexagonal Radio Array.Comment: 17 Page, 27 Figures, 1 Tabl
Probing the angular and polarization reconstruction of the ARIANNA detector at the South Pole
The sources of ultra-high energy (UHE) cosmic rays, which can have energies
up to 10^20 eV, remain a mystery. UHE neutrinos may provide important clues to
understanding the nature of cosmic-ray sources. ARIANNA aims to detect UHE
neutrinos via radio (Askaryan) emission from particle showers when a neutrino
interacts with ice, which is an efficient method for neutrinos with energies
between 10^16 eV and 10^20 eV. The ARIANNA radio detectors are located in
Antarctic ice just beneath the surface. Neutrino observation requires that
radio pulses propagate to the antennas at the surface with minimum distortion
by the ice and firn medium. Using the residual hole from the South Pole Ice
Core Project, radio pulses were emitted from a transmitter located up to 1.7 km
below the snow surface. By measuring these signals with an ARIANNA surface
station, the angular and polarization reconstruction abilities are quantified,
which are required to measure the direction of the neutrino. After deconvolving
the raw signals for the detector response and attenuation from propagation
through the ice, the signal pulses show no significant distortion and agree
with a reference measurement of the emitter made in an anechoic chamber.
Furthermore, the signal pulses reveal no significant birefringence for our
tested geometry of mostly vertical ice propagation. The origin of the
transmitted radio pulse was measured with an angular resolution of 0.37 degrees
indicating that the neutrino direction can be determined with good precision if
the polarization of the radio-pulse can be well determined. In the present
study we obtained a resolution of the polarization vector of 2.7 degrees.
Neither measurement show a significant offset relative to expectation
RHIC physics overview
The results from data taken during the last several years at the Relativistic
Heavy-Ion Collider (RHIC) will be reviewed in the paper. Several selected
topics that further our understanding of constituent quark scaling, jet
quenching and color screening effect of heavy quarkonia in the hot dense medium
will be presented. Detector upgrades will further probe the properties of Quark
Gluon Plasma. Future measurements with upgraded detectors will be presented.
The discovery perspectives from future measurements will also be discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, invited review article, published by Frontier of
Physics in Chin
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