New Infrastructure for Astroparticle Physics Research in South America
Hello
reader!
It
follows an article published today (01/07) in the english website of the Agência
FAPESP noting the new infrastructure for Astroparticle physics research in
South America.
Duda Falcão
NEWS
New Infrastructure
for Astroparticle
Physics Research in South America
By Elton Alisson
January 07, 2015
(Photo: Steven Saffi)
In addition to
benefiting from an upgrade to the
Pierre Auger Observatory, the continent may
host
the world’s largest gamma-ray observatory.
|
Agência FAPESP – In the next few years, South America’s
astroparticle physics research community expects to receive substantial
reinforcements to the infrastructure available for experiments in this
interdisciplinary area, which studies ultrahigh energy cosmic rays – the most
energetic subatomic particles known today and of as yet uncertain origin.
The world’s largest facility for observing cosmic
rays, the Pierre Auger Observatory, installed in Mendoza Province, Argentina,
and with Brazil’s participation supported by FAPESP and other funding agencies, is being upgraded,
with a completion date of 2018.
Meanwhile, the host country for the Cherenkov
Telescope Array (CTA) in the Southern Hemisphere will be chosen in 2015. The
CTA will be the world’s largest observatory dedicated to the study of celestial
bodies that emit gamma rays, the highest-energy form of radiation known in the
universe.
In addition, discussions are under way to prepare for
construction of the Agua Negra Deep Experiment Site (ANDES), Latin America’s
first underground laboratory. The lab will be located off a tunnel to be built
under the Andes Mountains between Argentina and Chile and will be used for
experiments in several fields, including astroparticle physics (also called
particle astrophysics).
“The astroparticle physics community in South America
is currently enjoying a very important and exciting phase thanks to the
expected materialization of these projects,” said Luiz Vitor de Souza Filho,
professor at the University of São Paulo’s São Carlos Institute of Physics
(IFSC-USP), in an interview with Agência FAPESP.
To discuss the prospects for the community offered by
these infrastructure projects in South America, Souza Filho and a group of 100
researchers from several other countries met in November at the University of
São Paulo’s Institute of Physics (IF-USP) for the 3rd Astroparticle Physics
Workshop: The future in South America. “The purpose of the event was to bring
together the international community of researchers in astroparticle physics in
order to begin planning the future of experiments in the area in a more
organized manner,” said Souza Filho, one of the organizers of the meeting.
“This is the right time for us to try to create a
research and investment plan, taking into account important scientific
questions that we can answer through the development of these projects,” he
added.
Upgrade Program
Among these questions, according to Souza Filho, is
the origin of ultrahigh-energy cosmic rays and the type of subatomic particles
that reach Earth with macroscopic energies in the range of 10 to the power of
18 electron-volts, i.e., a billion billion eV.
In the past ten years, the Pierre Auger Observatory
has enabled cosmic rays above 10 to the power of 20 eV to be observed. The
researchers at the meeting concluded that the facility has been highly
successful in this regard.
The results obtained by the Auger Collaboration,
however, do not yet allow the sources of these ultrahigh energy cosmic rays to
be totally identified.
“We’ve measured several properties of cosmic rays, but
we haven’t yet managed to locate their source or sources. And we don’t know
exactly whether the particles that come to Earth are pure protons, heavier
atomic particles or even a mixture of both,” said Souza Filho.
According to researchers in the field, one of the
challenges to identifying the source and composition of these particles from
space is that they can only be measured indirectly.
When an ultrahigh-energy cosmic particle enters
Earth’s atmosphere, it collides with the nucleus of an atom of atmospheric
material, producing new particles that in turn collide and interact. The resulting
particle cascade, called an extensive air shower, contains a billion particles
or more.
The Auger Observatory studies the ultraenergetic
cosmic rays that reach Earth by measuring the extensive air showers they
produce in the atmosphere.
The upgrade program being implemented at the Auger
Observatory is expected to help researchers answer these questions by
considerably enhancing the resolution of its particle detectors.
“The upgrade will allow us to measure different types
of particles and do so more precisely,” said Souza Filho.
Several proposals to upgrade the Auger Observatory are
currently being evaluated internally by a committee of physicists. They all
focus on enhancing the resolution of cosmic ray composition measurements.
Each of the various proposals involves a different
technique for the identification of muons – ultraenergetic subatomic particles
present in air showers – and requires different combinations of new electronic
devices, new detectors and internal modifications to the observatory’s 1,600
existing detectors.
Spread over an area of 3,000 km2 on a vast plain
overlooked by the Andes, the detectors are polyethylene tanks filled with
12,000 liters of purified water and instrumented with photomultiplier tubes.
When the particles in an air shower pass through the
water in the tank, they emit light that can be measured by the
photomultipliers.
Antennas mounted on top of each tank transmit the data
by radio to the main campus of the observatory in Malargüe, in western
Argentina. From there, the data are sent for analysis to some 450 researchers
in other parts of the world.
The proposals to upgrade the observatory call for the
addition of new devices to detect muons in the showers that are identified.
This will require modification of all the existing detectors and will cost an
estimated US$15 million.
Prototypes of the proposed muon detection systems are
being tested to make sure they really work.
“One of the proposals will be chosen in early 2015. We
hope the new detectors can be installed soon and commissioned, at the latest,
by 2023,” said Carola Dobrigkeit Chinellato in an interview with Agência
FAPESP. Chinellato is a professor at the State University of Campinas’s Gleb
Wataghin Institute of Physics (IFGW-Unicamp) and chairs the Auger Publications
Committee.
Chinellato also represented FAPESP at a meeting of the
Auger Finance Board, where funding agencies from the Collaboration’s 18 member
countries reviewed the project’s finances and approved its annual operating
budget. The meeting took place on November 15 at FAPESP’s headquarters in São
Paulo.
CTA
Also in early 2015, the Southern Hemisphere host
country will be chosen for CTA, an international consortium of 28 countries,
including Brazil, that plans to build by 2020 the world’s largest astronomical
observatory dedicated to the study of astrophysical objects that emit gamma
rays.
The observatory will have approximately 100 telescopes
that will be installed at two different sites, one in the Southern and the
other in the Northern Hemisphere. In the Southern Hemisphere, the candidate
countries are Chile and Argentina in South America and Namibia in southern
Africa, according to Souza Filho, one of the Brazilian researchers who are
participating in the project (for more information, see http://agencia.fapesp.br/16755).
The initial idea, he explained, is to build an array
of seven telescopes, which will form an embryo of the observatory called the
CTA Mini-Array, and build the rest around it at a later stage.
Three of the first seven telescopes will be built by
Brazil as part of a Thematic Project supported
by FAPESP.
Testing of the first of these telescopes began in
Catania, Italy, at the end of September. “The goal is to start by testing
this mini-array, obtain the first scientific data, and move on from there until
we have approximately 100 telescopes,” said Souza Filho.
During the workshop at USP, Werner Hofmann, CTA
spokesman and a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics in
Germany, said the CTA is unlikely not to come to South America.
ANDES Project
Another astroparticle physics research initiative in
South America that is under discussion concerns the construction of the ANDES
deep underground lab. The idea being developed by the research community is to
build the lab adjoining a 14 km tunnel that Argentina and Chile plan to
excavate under the Andes Mountains to facilitate access by the countries of
South America to the Pacific Ocean so that exports can be shipped more easily
to Asia.
The underground lab project involves the installation
of several types of equipment for research in different fields, including a
large detector capable of identifying low-energy neutrinos and geoneutrinos.
Geoneutrinos are produced by the decay of radioactive elements in Earth’s crust
and mantle, such as potassium, uranium and thorium, and are believed to play a
very important role in the planet’s heat balance.
The tunnel would be a suitable place to measure these
particles, according to researchers in the field.
“The ANDES facility would enable us to perform
experiments in different areas that require low levels of radiation, such as
measuring dark matter and neutrinos,” said Souza Filho.
So far, only Argentina, Brazil, Mexico and Chile have
invested in the project, which is seeking participation by other countries.
Source: English WebSite of the Agência FAPESP
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