1,381 research outputs found
A method for Cloud Mapping in the Field of View of the Infra-Red Camera during the EUSO-SPB1 flight
EUSO-SPB1 was released on April 24th, 2017, from the NASA balloon launch site in Wanaka (New Zealand) and landed on the South Pacific Ocean on May 7th. The data collected by the instruments onboard the balloon were analyzed to search UV pulse signatures of UHECR (Ultra High Energy Cosmic Rays) air showers. Indirect measurements of UHECRs can be affected by cloud presence during nighttime, therefore it is crucial to know the meteorological conditions during the observation period of the detector. During the flight, the onboard EUSO-SPB1 UCIRC camera (University of Chicago Infra-Red Camera), acquired images in the field of view of the UV telescope. The available nighttime and daytime images include information on meteorological conditions of the atmosphere observed in two infra-red bands. The presence of clouds has been investigated employing a method developed to provide a dense cloudiness map for each available infra-red image. The final masks are intended to give pixel cloudiness information at the IR-camera pixel resolution that is nearly 4-times higher than the one of the UV-camera. In this work, cloudiness maps are obtained by using an expert system based on the analysis of different low-level image features. Furthermore, an image enhancement step was needed to be applied as a preprocessing step to deal with uncalibrated data
Update of the search for Gamma Ray Bursts with ARGO-YBJ in scaler mode
We report an update of the search for emission from Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) in the energy range 1−100 GeV in coincidence with the prompt emission detected by satellites, using the large field of view (about 2 sr) air shower detector ARGO-YBJ, appropriate to monitor unpredictable and short duration events like GRBs. The search has been carried out using the single particle technique in time coincidence with satellite detections both for single events and by stacking GRBs in time and phase. Between December 2004 and April 2011, 131 GRBs detected by different satellites occurred in the ARGO-YBJ field of view (zenith angle within 45 degrees). For 110 of these we searched for a high
energy counterpart in the ARGO-YBJ data, finding no statistically significant signal. The resulting fluence upper limits between 1 and 100 GeV reach values as low as 10^(−5) erg/cm2, and in one case (GRB090902B) can be compared with observations by the LAT instrument on the Fermi satellite
Pinpointing astrophysical bursts of low-energy neutrinos embedded into the noise
We propose a novel method to increase the probability of identifying
impulsive astrophysical bursts of low-energy neutrinos. The proposed approach
exploits the temporal structure differences between astrophysical bursts and
background fluctuations and it allows us to pinpoint weak signals otherwise
unlikely to be detected. With respect to previous search strategies, this
method strongly reduces the misidentification probability, e.g. for Super
Kamiokande this reduction is a factor of within a distance of kpc without decreasing the detection efficiency. In addition, we extend
the proposed method to a network of different detectors and we show that the
Kamland LVD background reduction is improved by a factor up to
an horizon of kpc
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