1,015 research outputs found
Accelerator measurements of magnetically-induced radio emission from particle cascades with applications to cosmic-ray air showers
For fifty years, cosmic-ray air showers have been detected by their radio
emission. We present the first laboratory measurements that validate
electrodynamics simulations used in air shower modeling. An experiment at SLAC
provides a beam test of radio-frequency (RF) radiation from charged particle
cascades in the presence of a magnetic field, a model system of a cosmic-ray
air shower. This experiment provides a suite of controlled laboratory
measurements to compare to particle-level simulations of RF emission, which are
relied upon in ultra-high-energy cosmic-ray air shower detection. We compare
simulations to data for intensity, linearity with magnetic field, angular
distribution, polarization, and spectral content. In particular, we confirm
modern predictions that the magnetically induced emission in a dielectric forms
a cone that peaks at the Cherenkov angle and show that the simulations
reproduce the data within systematic uncertainties.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figure
The Origin of the Extragalactic Gamma-Ray Background and Implications for Dark-Matter Annihilation
The origin of the extragalactic -ray background (EGB) has been
debated for some time. { The EGB comprises the -ray emission from
resolved and unresolved extragalactic sources, such as blazars, star-forming
galaxies and radio galaxies, as well as radiation from truly diffuse
processes.} This letter focuses on the blazar source class, the most numerous
detected population, and presents an updated luminosity function and spectral
energy distribution model consistent with the blazar observations performed by
the {\it Fermi} Large Area Telescope (LAT). We show that blazars account for
50\,\% of the EGB photons (0.1\,GeV), and that {\it Fermi}-LAT
has already resolved 70\,\% of this contribution. Blazars, and in
particular low-luminosity hard-spectrum nearby sources like BL Lacs, are
responsible for most of the EGB emission above 100\,GeV. We find that the
extragalactic background light, which attenuates blazars' high-energy emission,
is responsible for the high-energy cut-off observed in the EGB spectrum.
Finally, we show that blazars, star-forming galaxies and radio galaxies can
naturally account for the amplitude and spectral shape of the background in the
0.1--820\,GeV range, leaving only modest room for other contributions. This
allows us to set competitive constraints on the dark-matter annihilation cross
section.Comment: On behalf of the Fermi-LAT collaboration. Contact authors: M. Ajello,
D. Gasparrini, M. Sanchez-Conde, G. Zaharijas, M. Gustafsson. Accepted for
publication on ApJ
A Hard X-ray Study of the Normal Star-Forming Galaxy M83 with NuSTAR
We present results from sensitive, multi-epoch NuSTAR observations of the
late-type star-forming galaxy M83 (d=4.6 Mpc), which is the first investigation
to spatially resolve the hard (E>10 keV) X-ray emission of this galaxy. The
nuclear region and ~ 20 off-nuclear point sources, including a previously
discovered ultraluminous X-ray (ULX) source, are detected in our NuSTAR
observations. The X-ray hardnesses and luminosities of the majority of the
point sources are consistent with hard X-ray sources resolved in the starburst
galaxy NGC 253. We infer that the hard X-ray emission is most likely dominated
by intermediate accretion state black hole binaries and neutron star low-mass
X-ray binaries (Z-sources). We construct the X-ray binary luminosity function
(XLF) in the NuSTAR band for an extragalactic environment for the first time.
The M83 XLF has a steeper XLF than the X-ray binary XLF in NGC 253, consistent
with previous measurements by Chandra at softer X-ray energies. The NuSTAR
integrated galaxy spectrum of M83 drops quickly above 10 keV, which is also
seen in the starburst galaxies NGC253, NGC 3310 and NGC 3256. The NuSTAR
observations constrain any AGN to be either highly obscured or to have an
extremely low luminosity of 10 erg/s (10-30 keV), implying it
is emitting at a very low Eddington ratio. An X-ray point source consistent
with the location of the nuclear star cluster with an X-ray luminosity of a few
times 10 erg/s may be a low-luminosity AGN but is more consistent with
being an X-ray binary.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ (25 pages, 17 figures
Development Toward a Ground-Based Interferometric Phased Array for Radio Detection of High Energy Neutrinos
The in-ice radio interferometric phased array technique for detection of high
energy neutrinos looks for Askaryan emission from neutrinos interacting in
large volumes of glacial ice, and is being developed as a way to achieve a low
energy threshold and a large effective volume at high energies. The technique
is based on coherently summing the impulsive Askaryan signal from multiple
antennas, which increases the signal-to-noise ratio for weak signals. We report
here on measurements and a simulation of thermal noise correlations between
nearby antennas, beamforming of impulsive signals, and a measurement of the
expected improvement in trigger efficiency through the phased array technique.
We also discuss the noise environment observed with an analog phased array at
Summit Station, Greenland, a possible site for an interferometric phased array
for radio detection of high energy neutrinos.Comment: 13 Pages, 14 Figure
Spatially Resolving a Starburst Galaxy at Hard X-ray Energies: NuSTAR, Chandra, AND VLBA Observations of NGC 253
Prior to the launch of NuSTAR, it was not feasible to spatially resolve the
hard (E > 10 keV) emission from galaxies beyond the Local Group. The combined
NuSTAR dataset, comprised of three ~165 ks observations, allows spatial
characterization of the hard X-ray emission in the galaxy NGC 253 for the first
time. As a follow up to our initial study of its nuclear region, we present the
first results concerning the full galaxy from simultaneous NuSTAR, Chandra, and
VLBA monitoring of the local starburst galaxy NGC 253. Above ~10 keV, nearly
all the emission is concentrated within 100" of the galactic center, produced
almost exclusively by three nuclear sources, an off-nuclear ultraluminous X-ray
source (ULX), and a pulsar candidate that we identify for the first time in
these observations. We detect 21 distinct sources in energy bands up to 25 keV,
mostly consisting of intermediate state black hole X-ray binaries. The global
X-ray emission of the galaxy - dominated by the off-nuclear ULX and nuclear
sources, which are also likely ULXs - falls steeply (photon index >~ 3) above
10 keV, consistent with other NuSTAR-observed ULXs, and no significant excess
above the background is detected at E > 40 keV. We report upper limits on
diffuse inverse Compton emission for a range of spatial models. For the most
extended morphologies considered, these hard X-ray constraints disfavor a
dominant inverse Compton component to explain the {\gamma}-ray emission
detected with Fermi and H.E.S.S. If NGC 253 is typical of starburst galaxies at
higher redshift, their contribution to the E > 10 keV cosmic X-ray background
is < 1%.Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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