466 research outputs found
First Experimental Characterization of Microwave Emission from Cosmic Ray Air Showers
We report the first direct measurement of the overall characteristics of
microwave radio emission from extensive air showers. Using a trigger provided
by the KASCADE-Grande air shower array, the signals of the microwave antennas
of the CROME (Cosmic-Ray Observation via Microwave Emission) experiment have
been read out and searched for signatures of radio emission by high-energy air
showers in the GHz frequency range. Microwave signals have been detected for
more than 30 showers with energies above 3*10^16 eV. The observations presented
in this Letter are consistent with a mainly forward-directed and polarised
emission process in the GHz frequency range. The measurements show that
microwave radiation offers a new means of studying air showers at energies
above 10^17 eV.Comment: Accepted for publication in PR
On noise treatment in radio measurements of cosmic ray air showers
Precise measurements of the radio emission by cosmic ray air showers require
an adequate treatment of noise. Unlike to usual experiments in particle
physics, where noise always adds to the signal, radio noise can in principle
decrease or increase the signal if it interferes by chance destructively or
constructively. Consequently, noise cannot simply be subtracted from the
signal, and its influence on amplitude and time measurement of radio pulses
must be studied with care. First, noise has to be determined consistently with
the definition of the radio signal which typically is the maximum field
strength of the radio pulse. Second, the average impact of noise on radio pulse
measurements at individual antennas is studied for LOPES. It is shown that a
correct treatment of noise is especially important at low signal-to-noise
ratios: noise can be the dominant source of uncertainty for pulse height and
time measurements, and it can systematically flatten the slope of lateral
distributions. The presented method can also be transfered to other experiments
in radio and acoustic detection of cosmic rays and neutrinos.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, submitted to NIM A, Proceedings of ARENA 2010,
Nantes, Franc
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