16,183 research outputs found
Preliminary results of the AMIGA engineering array at the Pierre Auger Observatory
The Auger Muons and Infill for the Ground Array (AMIGA) aims to both extend
the detection range of the Pierre Auger Observatory down to energies and to measure the muon content of extensive air
showers. To accomplish these goals, its detection system is composed of an
array of coupled water-Cherenkov and scintillation detectors deployed in a
graded triangular grid of 433 and 750\,m spacings. At each position, the
scintillation detector is buried deep so as to shield it from
the air shower electromagnetic component and thus only measure the muon
component. These muon detectors have area split into modules,
each of them highly segmented in 64 plastic-scintillator strips with an
embedded wavelength-shifter optical fiber to transport light to an optical
sensor located at the center of the module. During the engineering array phase
(finished in November 2017) two module areas ( and
) and two optical sensors (photo-multiplier tubes and
silicon-photomultipliers) were tested. In this work, we present the final
performance of the muon detectors equipped with silicon-photomultipliers which
were thereafter selected as the baseline design for the AMIGA production phase.
Analyses and results are based both on laboratory and field measurements.Comment: Proceeding of the UHECR 2018 conference, submitted to the forthcoming
EPJ Web of Conference
Identification of rolling resistance as a shape parameter in sheared granular media
Using contact dynamics simulations, we compare the effect of rolling
resistance at the contacts in granular systems composed of disks with the
effect of angularity in granular systems composed of regular polygonal
particles. In simple shear conditions, we consider four aspects of the
mechanical behavior of these systems in the steady state: shear strength, solid
fraction, force and fabric anisotropies, and probability distribution of
contact forces. Our main finding is that, based on the energy dissipation
associated with relative rotation between two particles in contact, the effect
of rolling resistance can explicitly be identified with that of the number of
sides in a regular polygonal particle. This finding supports the use of rolling
resistance as a shape parameter accounting for particle angularity and shows
unambiguously that one of the main influencing factors behind the mechanical
behavior of granular systems composed of noncircular particles is the partial
hindrance of rotations as a result of angular particle shape.Comment: Soumis a Physical Review E; Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft Matter
Physics http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevE.84.01130
Prospects for the detection of GRBs with HAWC
The observation of Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) with very-high-energy (VHE) gamma
rays can provide understanding of the particle acceleration mechanisms in GRBs,
and can also be used to probe the extra-galactic background light and place
constraints on Lorentz invariance violation. We present prospects for GRB
detection by the ground-based HAWC (High Altitude Water Cherenkov) gamma-ray
observatory. We model the VHE spectrum of GRBs by extrapolating observations by
Fermi LAT and other observatories to higher energies. Under the assumption that
only e-pair production associated with extra-galactic background light is
responsible for high-energy cutoffs in the spectrum, we find that HAWC will
have a detection rate as high as 1.65 GRBs/year. Most of the sensitivity of
HAWC to GRBs is derived from short-hard GRBs during the prompt phase. We
explore the possibility of universal high-energy cutoffs in GRB spectra and
find that the GRB detection rate by HAWC should be at least half of this figure
as long as the typical intrinsic cutoff is above 200-300 GeV in the rest frame
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