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Observation of the thunderstorm-related ground cosmic ray flux variations by ARGO-YBJ

Authors :
Bartoli, B.
Bernardini, P.
Bi, X. J.
Cao, Z.
Catalanotti, S.
Chen, S. Z.
Chen, T. L.
Cui, S. W.
Dai, B. Z.
Amone, A. D
Luobu, Danzeng
De Mitri, I.
Piazzoli, B. D Ettorre
Di Girolamo, T.
Di Sciascio, G.
Feng, C. F.
Feng, Zhaoyang
Feng, Zhenyong
Gao, W.
Gou, Q. B.
Guo, Y. Q.
He, H. H.
Hu, Haibing
Hu, Hongbo
Iacovacci, M.
Iuppa, R.
Jia, H. Y.
Ren, Labaci
Li, H. J.
Liu, C.
Liu, J.
Liu, M. Y.
Lu, H.
Ma, L. L.
Ma, X. H.
Mancarella, G.
Mari, S. M.
Marsella, G.
Mastroianni, S.
Montini, P.
Ning, C. C.
Perrone, L.
Pistilli, P.
Salvini, P.
Santonico, R.
Shen, P. R.
Sheng, X. D.
Shi, F.
Surdo, A.
Tan, Y. H.
Vallania, P.
Vernetto, S.
Vigorito, C.
Wang, H.
Wu, C. Y.
Wu, H. R.
Xue, L.
Yang, Q. Y.
Yang, X. C.
Yao, Z. G.
Yuan, A. F.
Zha, M.
Zhang, H. M.
Zhang, L.
Zhang, X. Y.
Zhang, Y.
Zhao, J.
Ren, Zhaxici
Zhu, Zhaxisang
Zhou, X. X.
Zhu, F. R.
Zhu, Q. Q.
Alessandro, F. D.
Source :
Phys. Rev. D 97, 042001 (2018)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

A correlation between the secondary cosmic ray flux and the near-earth electric field intensity, measured during thunderstorms, has been found by analyzing the data of the ARGO-YBJ experiment, a full coverage air shower array located at the Yangbajing Cosmic Ray Laboratory (4300 m a. s. l., Tibet, China). The counting rates of showers with different particle multiplicities, have been found to be strongly dependent upon the intensity and polarity of the electric field measured during the course of 15 thunderstorms. In negative electric fields (i.e. accelerating negative charges downwards), the counting rates increase with increasing electric field strength. In positive fields, the rates decrease with field intensity until a certain value of the field EFmin (whose value depends on the event multiplicity), above which the rates begin increasing. By using Monte Carlo simulations, we found that this peculiar behavior can be well described by the presence of an electric field in a layer of thickness of a few hundred meters in the atmosphere above the detector, which accelerates/decelerates the secondary shower particles of opposite charge, modifying the number of particles with energy exceeding the detector threshold. These results, for the first time, give a consistent explanation for the origin of the variation of the electron/positron flux observed for decades by high altitude cosmic ray detectors during thunderstorms.<br />Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures. The paper has been accepted by PRD

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Phys. Rev. D 97, 042001 (2018)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1712.01461
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.97.042001