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Comparing LOPES measurements of air-shower radio emission with REAS 3.11 and CoREAS simulations

Authors :
Alexandra Saftoiu
Béatrice Fuchs
D. Huber
Jörg R. Hörandel
K. Link
G.C. Trinchero
F. Di Pierro
A. Haungs
C. Morello
C. Rühle
D. Fuhrmann
W. D. Apel
J. Blümer
H. Bozdog
Paula Gina Isar
J. Rautenberg
M. Melissas
Markus Roth
Peter L. Biermann
J. Zabierowski
J.C. Arteaga-Velázquez
T. Pierog
A. Chiavassa
G. Toma
Tim Huege
P. Łuczak
N. Palmieri
Kai Daumiller
J. Oehlschläger
E. Cantoni
Ralph Engel
A. Schmidt
Heino Falcke
M. E. Bertaina
J. A. Zensus
I.M. Brancus
A. Horneffer
Claus Grupen
K. Bekk
P. Doll
V. de Souza
A. Weindl
Jan Kuijpers
H. Gemmeke
H. Rebel
H. Schieler
Karl-Heinz Kampert
J. Wochele
Octavian Sima
D. Heck
M. Ludwig
H. J. Mathes
F.G. Schröder
L. Bähren
O. Krömer
D. Kang
Source :
Astroparticle Physics, 50-52, 76-91, Astroparticle Physics, 50-52, December, pp. 76-91, Repositório Institucional da USP (Biblioteca Digital da Produção Intelectual), Universidade de São Paulo (USP), instacron:USP
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
arXiv, 2013.

Abstract

Cosmic ray air showers emit radio pulses at MHz frequencies, which can be measured with radio antenna arrays - like LOPES at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany. To improve the understanding of the radio emission, we test theoretical descriptions with measured data. The observables used for these tests are the absolute amplitude of the radio signal, and the shape of the radio lateral distribution. We compare lateral distributions of more than 500 LOPES events with two recent and public Monte Carlo simulation codes, REAS 3.11 and CoREAS (v 1.0). The absolute radio amplitudes predicted by REAS 3.11 are in good agreement with the LOPES measurements. The amplitudes predicted by CoREAS are lower by a factor of two, and marginally compatible with the LOPES measurements within the systematic scale uncertainties. In contrast to any previous versions of REAS, REAS 3.11 and CoREAS now reproduce the shape of the measured lateral distributions correctly. This reflects a remarkable progress compared to the situation a few years ago, and it seems that the main processes for the radio emission of air showers are now understood: The emission is mainly due to the geomagnetic deflection of the electrons and positrons in the shower. Less important but not negligible is the Askaryan effect (net charge variation). Moreover, we confirm that the refractive index of the air plays an important role, since it changes the coherence conditions for the emission: Only the new simulations including the refractive index can reproduce rising lateral distributions which we observe in a few LOPES events. Finally, we show that the lateral distribution is sensitive to the energy and the mass of the primary cosmic ray particles.<br />Comment: Attention: results and conclusion partly changed due to updated calibration. See Astroparticle Physics 75 (2016) 72-74; arXiv:1507.07389

Details

ISSN :
09276505
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Astroparticle Physics, 50-52, 76-91, Astroparticle Physics, 50-52, December, pp. 76-91, Repositório Institucional da USP (Biblioteca Digital da Produção Intelectual), Universidade de São Paulo (USP), instacron:USP
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8254cb3a33d2f146d5effdfbe2974c7e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1309.5920