World's Largest Cosmic-Ray Observatory Selects Upgrade Proposal
Hello reader!
It follows an article published today (04/16) in the english
website of the Agência FAPESP noting that World's Largest Cosmic-Ray Observatory
selects upgrade proposal.
Duda Falcão
NEWS
World's Largest Cosmic-Ray
Observatory Selects Upgrade Proposal
By Elton Alisson,
in Buenos Aires
April 16, 2015
(Photo: Pierre Auger Observatory)
The Pierre Auger Observatory in Argentina is to be
upgraded
to help identify the origin of the most energetic subatomic
particles
known to science.
|
Agência FAPESP – The 17 countries that participate in the
Pierre Auger Collaboration, including Brazil and Argentina, have selected a
proposal to upgrade the world’s largest facility for observing cosmic rays,
installed near the town of Malargüe in Mendoza Province, Argentina, about 1,000
km from Buenos Aires.
Details of the proposal were presented during a
round-table session on large-scale scientific collaborations held on April 8 as
part of FAPESP Week Buenos
Aires.
Hosted in Buenos Aires by FAPESP in partnership with
Argentina’s National Scientific & Technological Research Council (CONICET),
the event brought together researchers from São Paulo State and several higher
education and research institutions in Argentina to discuss an increase in
scientific collaboration between the two countries.
“The Pierre Auger Observatory is a good example of a
major international scientific collaboration, with Argentina and Brazil
participating effectively in the design, construction operation and enhancement
of the detector system’s performance throughout the ten years since its
inception,” said Carola Dobrigkeit Chinellato, chair of the Auger Publications
Committee and a professor at the University of Campinas’s Gleb Wataghin Physics
Institute (IFGW-UNICAMP).
“The upgrade will enhance the observatory’s
technological capabilities so that we can supplement the data collected on the
ultra high energy cosmic particles we observe with the detectors we have there
at present,” Chinellato told Agência FAPESP.
Some 500 scientists from the 17 participating
countries work with the observatory, which began collecting data in 2004 after
over ten years of planning. Brazil’s share in the collaboration is about 5% and
Argentina’s roughly 8%.
Participation by researchers from São Paulo State is supported by FAPESP. Other Brazilian
research funding agencies support participation by researchers from other
states.
“Brazil and Argentina are the main partners in the
Pierre Auger Collaboration,” said Alberto Etchegoyen, director of the
Astroparticle Detection Technology Institute subordinated to Argentina’s
National Atomic Energy Commission (CNEA), in a presentation during the event.
According to the researchers who are participating in
the collaboration, in ten years of operation the Pierre Auger Observatory has
enabled them to observe dozens of cosmic rays in the energy region above 100
billion billion electron-volts (1020 eV), and has confirmed that there is a
strong suppression of the flux of cosmic rays reaching Earth at energies above
55 billion billion electron-volts (5.5 x 1019eV).
Among the questions researchers hope to answer thanks
to the upgrade is what causes this suppression of the most energetic subatomic
particles hitherto known to science, especially whether it is due to energy
loss during extragalactic propagation or the existence of an upper energy limit
for particles in their galactic or extragalactic sources.
“If we can identify the origin of the flux
suppression, we’ll be able to find ultra high energy cosmic ray sources or
source regions ,” Chinellato said.
“The key to achievement of this goal is enhanced
identification of the composition of primary cosmic rays, especially at the
highest energy levels.”
According to participating researchers, identifying
the source and composition of these astroparticles is a major challenge because
they can only be measured indirectly.
When an ultra high energy cosmic particle reaches
Earth’s atmosphere it collides with the nucleus of an air atom, 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 to be implemented at the observatory
is expected to help researchers answer fundamental questions about the nature
of ultraenergetic cosmic rays.
“In order for the observatory to achieve these
scientific goals, it’s important to improve the sensitivity of its particle
detectors and extend observations into the energy region in which the flux of
ultra high energy cosmic rays is suppressed,” Chinellato said.
Selected Proposal
According to Chinellato, members of the collaboration
presented five proposals to upgrade the Auger Observatory. The proposals were
evaluated by a committee of outside experts.
Each proposal involved a different technique for
identifying and quantifying muons in air showers. Muons are elusive subatomic
particles that are created when cosmic rays hit air molecules high in the upper
atmosphere.
Muon quantification will help researchers obtain
information on the composition of the highest-energy cosmic rays, Chinellato
explained.
The selected proposal, known as the Scintillator
Surface Detector Array, calls for the installation of additional 2 m2 detectors
on top of each of the observatory’s 1,660 surface detectors and will cost US$12
million, equivalent to one-fifth of the observatory’s construction cost.
Spread over an area of 3,000 km2 on a
vast plain overlooked by the Andes, the detectors (which operate
uninterruptedly) are polyethylene tanks filled with 12,000 liters of purified
water and instrumentalized with photomultiplier sensor tubes.
When 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 is sent for analysis to some 500 researchers in
other parts of the world.
The observatory’s existing surface detectors are
already fairly sensitive to the muons present in air showers. The addition of
new detectors with scintillators will enhance the resolution and enable
researchers to measure particles more precisely.
“Prototypes of the scintillation detectors are already
being tested at the observatory,” Chinellato said. “We expect most of the new
detectors to have been installed within two years, so that we’ll be able to
measure ultra high energy cosmic rays more precisely without interrupting the observatory’s
operations.”
Source: English WebSite of the Agência FAPESP
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