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Detecting Radio Emission from Air Showers with LOFAR

Authors :
Nelles, Anna
Buitink, Stijn
Corstanje, Arthur
Enriquez, Emilio
Falcke, Heino
Frieswijk, Wilfred
Hörandel, Jörg
Mevius, Maaijke
Thoudam, Satyendra
Schellart, Pim
Scholten, Olaf
ter Veen, Sander
Akker, Martin van den
Collaboration, The LOFAR
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

LOFAR (the Low Frequency Array) is the largest radio telescope in the world for observing low frequency radio emission from 10 to 240 MHz. In addition to its use as an interferometric array, LOFAR is now routinely used to detect cosmic ray induced air showers by their radio emission. The LOFAR core in the Netherlands has a higher density of antennas than any dedicated cosmic ray experiment in radio. On an area of $12 \mathrm{km}^2$ more than 2300 antennas are installed. They measure the radio emission from air showers with unprecedented precision and, therefore, give the perfect opportunity to disentangle the physical processes which cause the radio emission in air showers. In parallel to ongoing astronomical observations LOFAR is triggered by an array of particle detectors to record time-series containing cosmic-ray pulses. Cosmic rays have been measured with LOFAR since June 2011. We present the results of the first year of data.<br />Comment: Accepted for AIP Conference Proceedings, ARENA 2012, Erlangen, Germany

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1304.0976
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4807530