Air shower measurements with LOFAR
✍ Scribed by A. Horneffer; L. Bähren; S. Buitink; H. Falcke; J.R. Hörandel; J. Kuijpers; S. Lafebre; A. Nigl; O. Scholten; K. Singh
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 978 KB
- Volume
- 604
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0168-9002
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✦ Synopsis
Air showers from cosmic rays emit short, intense radio pulses. The Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) is a new radio telescope, that is being built in the Netherlands and Europe. Designed primarily as a radio interferometer, the core of LOFAR will have a high density of radio antennas, which will be extremely well calibrated. This makes LOFAR a unique tool for the study of the radio properties of single air showers.
Triggering on the radio emission from air showers means detecting a short radio pulse and discriminating real events from radio interference. At LOFAR we plan to search for pulses in the digital data stream-either from single antennas or from already beam-formed data-and calculate several parameters characterizing the pulse shape to pick out real events in a second stage. In addition, we will have a small scintillator array to test and confirm the performance of the radio only trigger.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
LOPES is set up at the location of the KASCADE-Grande extensive air shower experiment in Karlsruhe, Germany and aims to measure and investigate radio pulses from extensive air showers. Since radio waves suffer very little attenuation, radio measurements allow the detection of very distant or highly