10 research outputs found
Measurement of Cosmic Ray spectrum and Anisotropy with ARGO-YBJ
In this paper we report on the observation of the anisotropy of cosmic ray
arrival direction at different angular scales with ARGO-YBJ. Evidence of new
few-degree excesses throughout the sky region 195 R.A.
315 is presented for the first time. We report also on the
measurement of the light-component (p+He) spectrum of primary cosmic rays in
the range 5 - 200 TeV.Comment: Invited talk to the 3rd Galileo - Xu Guangqi meeting, October 11-15,
2011 Beijing (China
The Trigger System of the ARGO-YBJ detector
The ARGO-YBJ experiment has been designed to detect air shower events over a
large size scale and with an energy threshold of a few hundreds GeV. The
building blocks of the ARGO-YBJ detector are single-gap Resistive Plate
Counters (RPCs). The trigger logic selects the events on the basis of their hit
multiplicity. Inclusive triggers as well as dedicated triggers for specific
physics channels or calibration purposes have been developed. This paper
describes the architecture and the main features of the trigger system.Comment: 4 pages, to be published in the Proceedings of the 28th International
Cosmic Ray Conference (Tsukuba, Japan 2003
Latest results on cosmic ray physics from the ARGO-YBJ experiment
Cosmic ray physics in the 10^12–10^15 eV primary energy range is among the main scientific goals of the
ARGO-YBJ experiment. The detector, located in the Cosmic Ray Observatory of Yangbajing (Tibet, China)
at 4300 m a.s.l., is a full coverage extensive air shower array consisting of a carpet of Resistive Plate
Chambers (RPCs) distributed over an area of more than 10 000 m2. The apparatus layout, performance
and location offer a unique opportunity for a detailed study of several characteristics of the hadronic
component of the cosmic ray flux in an energy window marked by the transition from direct to indirect
measurements. Moreover, the analog readout of the RPC signals indeed provides a powerful tool to study,
with unprecedented resolution and without saturation, the extensive air shower space–time structure
down to few meters from its axis. Latest results concerning the study of cosmic ray energy spectrum,
mass composition and arrival directions will be given together with the search for an antiproton signal,
the proton–air cross-section measurement, the study of the interplanetary magnetic field, and the effects
of the geomagnetic field on secondary particles. Furthermore, particle distributions close to the shower
axis are being extensively studied, also giving new inputs, in the very forward region, to the hadronic
interaction models currently used for understanding particle physics and cosmic rays up to the highest
energies
Time structure of the extensive air shower front with theARGO-YBJ experiment
The ARGO-YBJ experiment is an Extensive
Air Shower array currently operating at the high
altitude Yangbajing Cosmic Ray Laboratory (Tibet,
P.R. China 4300 m a.s.l.). The detector consists of
a layer of Resistive Plate Counters (RPCs) covering
an area of about 5800 m2. Its fine granularity, full
coverage design and high time resolution provide
a detailed characterization of cosmic ray showers.
Curvature, thickness and shape of the shower front
have been investigated up to 100 TeV. Detailed Monte
Carlo simulations of the detector response have been
performed using CORSIKA showers and results are
compared to data. Finally, correlations of measured
observables with the nature of the primary are
discusse