289 research outputs found
Cosmic Ray in the Northern Hemisphere: Results from the Telescope Array Experiment
The Telescope Array (TA) is the largest ultrahigh energy (UHE) cosmic ray
observatory in the northern hemisphere TA is a hybrid experiment with a unique
combination of fluorescence detectors and a stand-alone surface array of
scintillation counters. We will present the spectrum measured by the surface
array alone, along with those measured by the fluorescence detectors in
monocular, hybrid, and stereo mode. The composition results from stereo TA data
will be discussed. Our report will also include results from the search for
correlations between the pointing directions of cosmic rays, seen by the TA
surface array, with active galactic nuclei.Comment: 8 pages 11 figure, Proceedings of the APS Division of Particle and
Fields (DPF) Meeting, Aug 2011, Brown University, Providence, RI, US
Radio Emission from Cosmic Ray Air Showers: Coherent Geosynchrotron Radiation
Cosmic ray air showers have been known for over 30 years to emit pulsed radio
emission in the frequency range from a few to a few hundred MHz, an effect that
offers great opportunities for the study of extensive air showers with upcoming
fully digital "software radio telescopes" such as LOFAR and the enhancement of
particle detector arrays such as KASCADE Grande or the Pierre Auger
Observatory. However, there are still a lot of open questions regarding the
strength of the emission as well as the underlying emission mechanism.
Accompanying the development of a LOFAR prototype station dedicated to the
observation of radio emission from extensive air showers, LOPES, we therefore
take a new approach to modeling the emission process, interpreting it as
"coherent geosynchrotron emission" from electron-positron pairs gyrating in the
earth's magnetic field. We develop our model in a step-by-step procedure
incorporating increasingly realistic shower geometries in order to disentangle
the coherence effects arising from the different scales present in the air
shower structure and assess their influence on the spectrum and radial
dependence of the emitted radiation. We infer that the air shower "pancake"
thickness directly limits the frequency range of the emitted radiation, while
the radial dependence of the emission is mainly governed by the intrinsic
beaming cone of the synchrotron radiation and the superposition of the emission
over the air shower evolution as a whole. Our model succeeds in reproducing the
qualitative trends in the emission spectrum and radial dependence that were
observed in the past, and is consistent with the absolute level of the emission
within the relatively large systematic errors in the experimental data.Comment: 17 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication by Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Universality of electron-positron distributions in extensive air showers
Using a large set of simulated extensive air showers, we investigate
universality features of electron and positron distributions in
very-high-energy cosmic-ray air showers. Most particle distributions depend
only on the depth of the shower maximum and the number of particles in the
cascade at this depth. We provide multi-dimensional parameterizations for the
electron-positron distributions in terms of particle energy, vertical and
horizontal momentum angle, lateral distance, and time distribution of the
shower front. These parameterizations can be used to obtain realistic
electron-positron distributions in extensive air showers for data analysis and
simulations of Cherenkov radiation, fluorescence signal, and radio emission.Comment: 13 pages, 22 figures, 1 tabl
Characteristics of geomagnetic cascading of ultra-high energy photons at the southern and northern sites of the Pierre Auger Observatory
Cosmic-ray photons above 10^19 eV can convert in the geomagnetic field and
initiate a preshower, i.e. a particle cascade before entering the atmosphere.
We compare the preshower characteristics at the southern and northern sites of
the Pierre Auger Observatory. In addition to a shift of the preshower patterns
on the sky due to the different pointing of the local magnetic field vectors,
the fact that the northern Auger site is closer to the geomagnetic pole results
in a different energy dependence of the preshower effect: photon conversion can
start at smaller energies, but large conversion probabilitites (>90%) are
reached for the whole sky at higher energies compared to the southern Auger
site. We show how the complementary preshower features at the two sites can be
used to search for ultra-high energy photons among cosmic rays. In particular,
the different preshower characteristics at the northern Auger site may provide
an elegant and unambiguous confirmation if a photon signal is detected at the
southern site.Comment: 25 pages, 14 figures, minor changes, conclusions unchanged, Appendix
A replaced, accepted by Astroparticle Physic
Radio emission from cosmic ray air showers: Monte Carlo simulations
We present time-domain Monte Carlo simulations of radio emission from cosmic
ray air showers in the scheme of coherent geosynchrotron radiation. Our model
takes into account the important air shower characteristics such as the lateral
and longitudinal particle distributions, the particle track length and energy
distributions, a realistic magnetic field geometry and the shower evolution as
a whole. The Monte Carlo approach allows us to retain the full polarisation
information and to carry out the calculations without the need for any
far-field approximations. We demonstrate the strategies developed to tackle the
computational effort associated with the simulation of a huge number of
particles for a great number of observer bins and illustrate the robustness and
accuracy of these techniques. We predict the emission pattern, the radial and
the spectral dependence of the radiation from a prototypical 10^17 eV vertical
air shower and find good agreement with our analytical results (Huege & Falcke
2003) and the available historical data. Track-length effects in combination
with magnetic field effects surprisingly wash out any significant asymmetry in
the total field strength emission pattern in spite of the magnetic field
geometry. While statistics of total field strengths alone can therefore not
prove the geomagnetic origin, the predicted high degree of polarisation in the
direction perpendicular to the shower and magnetic field axes allows a direct
test of the geomagnetic emission mechanism with polarisation-sensitive
experiments such as LOPES. Our code provides a robust, yet flexible basis for
detailed studies of the dependence of the radio emission on specific shower
parameters and for the inclusion of additional radiation mechanism in the
future.Comment: 21 pages, version accepted for publication by Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Bounds on the cosmogenic neutrino flux
Under the assumption that some part of the observed highest energy cosmic
rays consists of protons originating from cosmological distances, we derive
bounds on the associated flux of neutrinos generated by inelastic processes
with the cosmic microwave background photons. We exploit two methods. First, a
power-like injection spectrum is assumed. Then, a model-independent technique,
based on the inversion of the observed proton flux, is presented. The inferred
lower bound is quite robust. As expected, the upper bound depends on the
unknown composition of the highest energy cosmic rays. Our results represent
benchmarks for all ultrahigh energy neutrino telescopes.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
Measurement of the Flux of Ultrahigh Energy Cosmic Rays from Monocular Observations by the High Resolution Fly's Eye Experiment
We have measured the cosmic ray spectrum above 10^17.2 eV using the two air
fluorescence detectors of the High Resolution Fly's Eye observatory operating
in monocular mode. We describe the detector, photo-tube and atmospheric
calibrations, as well as the analysis techniques for the two detectors. We fit
the spectrum to a model consisting of galactic and extra-galactic sources.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Uses 10pt.rtx, amsmath.sty, aps.rtx, revsymb.sty,
revtex4.cl
On The Origin of Very High Energy Cosmic Rays
We discuss the most recent developments in our understanding of the
acceleration and propagation of cosmic rays up to the highest energies. In
particular we specialize our discussion to three issues: 1) developments in the
theory of particle acceleration at shock waves; 2) the transition from galactic
to extragalactic cosmic rays; 3) implications of up-to-date observations for
the origin of ultra high energy cosmic rays (UHECRs).Comment: Invited Review Article to appear in Modern Physics Letters A, Review
Sectio
The Extremely High Energy Cosmic Rays
Experimental results from Haverah Park, Yakutsk, AGASA and Fly's Eye are
reviewed. All these experiments work in the energy range above 0.1 EeV. The
'dip' structure around 3 EeV in the energy spectrum is well established by all
the experiments, though the exact position differs slightly. Fly's Eye and
Yakutsk results on the chemical composition indicate that the cosmic rays are
getting lighter over the energy range from 0.1 EeV to 10 EeV, but the exact
fraction is hadronic interaction model dependent, as indicated by the AGASA
analysis. The arrival directions of cosmic rays are largely isotropic, but
interesting features may be starting to emerge. Most of the experimental
results can best be explained with the scenario that an extragalactic component
gradually takes over a galactic population as energy increases and cosmic rays
at the highest energies are dominated by particles coming from extragalactic
space. However, identification of the extragalactic sources has not yet been
successful because of limited statistics and the resolution of the data.Comment: The review paper including 21 figures. 39 pages: To be published in
Journal of Physics
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