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Characterization of the varying flux of atmospheric muons measured with the Large Volume Detector for 24 years

Authors :
Agafonova, N. Yu.
Aglietta, M.
Antonioli, P.
Ashikhmin, V. V.
Bari, G.
Bruno, G.
Dobrynina, E. A.
Enikeev, R. I.
Fulgione, W.
Galeotti, P.
Garbini, M.
Ghia, P. L.
Giusti, P.
Kemp, E.
Malgin, A. S.
Molinario, A.
Persiani, R.
Pless, I. A.
Rubinetti, S.
Ryazhskaya, O. G.
Sartorelli, G.
Shakiryanova, I. R.
Selvi, M.
Taricco, C.
Trinchero, G. C.
Vigorito, C. F.
Yakushev, V. F.
Zichichi, A.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The Large Volume Detector (LVD), hosted in the INFN Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso, is triggered by atmospheric muons at a rate of $\sim 0.1$~Hz. The data collected over almost a quarter of century are used to study the muon intensity underground. The 50-million muon series, the longest ever exploited by an underground instrument, allows for the accurate long-term monitoring of the muon intensity underground. This is relevant as a study of the background in the Gran Sasso Laboratory, which hosts a variety of long-duration, low-background detectors. We describe the procedure to select muon-like events as well as the method used to compute the exposure. We report the value of the average muon flux measured from 1994 to 2017: $\mathrm{I_{\mu}^0 = 3.35 \pm 0.0005^{stat}\pm 0.03^{sys} \cdot 10^{-4} ~m^{-2} s^{-1}}$. We show that the intensity is modulated around this average value due to temperature variations in the stratosphere. We quantify such a correlation by using temperature data from the European Center for Medium-range Weather Forecasts: we find an effective temperature coefficient $\mathrm{\alpha_{T}} = 0.94\pm0.01^{stat} \pm0.01^{sys}$, in agreement with other measurements at the same depth. We scrutinise the spectral content of the time series of the muon intensity by means of the Lomb-Scargle analysis. This yields the evidence of a 1-year periodicity, as well as the indication of others, both shorter and longer, suggesting that the series is not a pure sinusoidal wave. Consequently, and for the first time, we characterise the observed modulation in terms of amplitude and position of maximum and minimum on a year-by-year basis.<br />Comment: 26 pages, 10 figures, 4 tables

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1909.04579
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.100.062002