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Design and initial performance of the Askaryan Radio Array prototype EeV neutrino detector at the South Pole

Authors :
Allison, Patrick
Auffenberg, Jan
Bard, Robert
Beatty, James
Besson, David DZB
Böser, Sybille
Chen, Chih-Ching
Chen, Pisin
Connolly, Amy
Davies, Jonathan
Duvernois, Michael
Fox, Brendan
Gorham, Peter
Grashorn, E.
Hanson, Kael Dylan
Haugen, James
Helbing, Klaus
Hill, B.
Hoffman, Kara KDH
Hong, Eugene
Huang, M.
Huang, M.H.A.
Ishihara, Aya
Karle, Albrecht
Kennedy, Daniel
Landsman, H.
Liu, T.C.
Macchiarulo, Luca
Mase, K.
Meures, Thomas
Meyhandan, Rishi
Miki, Christian
Morse, Robert
Newcomb, M.
Nichol, Ryan RJN
Ratzlaff, Ken
Richman, Michael
Ritter, L.
Rott, C.
Rotter, Ben
Sandstrom, Perry
Seckel, David
Touart, J.
Varner, Gary
Wang, M.Z.
Weaver, Christopher
Wendorff, Andrew
Yoshida, Sho
Young, Robert
Allison, Patrick
Auffenberg, Jan
Bard, Robert
Beatty, James
Besson, David DZB
Böser, Sybille
Chen, Chih-Ching
Chen, Pisin
Connolly, Amy
Davies, Jonathan
Duvernois, Michael
Fox, Brendan
Gorham, Peter
Grashorn, E.
Hanson, Kael Dylan
Haugen, James
Helbing, Klaus
Hill, B.
Hoffman, Kara KDH
Hong, Eugene
Huang, M.
Huang, M.H.A.
Ishihara, Aya
Karle, Albrecht
Kennedy, Daniel
Landsman, H.
Liu, T.C.
Macchiarulo, Luca
Mase, K.
Meures, Thomas
Meyhandan, Rishi
Miki, Christian
Morse, Robert
Newcomb, M.
Nichol, Ryan RJN
Ratzlaff, Ken
Richman, Michael
Ritter, L.
Rott, C.
Rotter, Ben
Sandstrom, Perry
Seckel, David
Touart, J.
Varner, Gary
Wang, M.Z.
Weaver, Christopher
Wendorff, Andrew
Yoshida, Sho
Young, Robert
Source :
Astroparticle physics, 35
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

We report on studies of the viability and sensitivity of the Askaryan Radio Array (ARA), a new initiative to develop a Teraton-scale ultra-high energy neutrino detector in deep, radio-transparent ice near Amundsen-Scott station at the South Pole. An initial prototype ARA detector system was installed in January 2011, and has been operating continuously since then. We describe measurements of the background radio noise levels, the radio clarity of the ice, and the estimated sensitivity of the planned ARA array given these results, based on the first five months of operation. Anthropogenic radio interference in the vicinity of the South Pole currently leads to a few-percent loss of data, but no overall effect on the background noise levels, which are dominated by the thermal noise floor of the cold polar ice, and galactic noise at lower frequencies. We have also successfully detected signals originating from a 2.5 km deep impulse generator at a distance of over 3 km from our prototype detector, confirming prior estimates of kilometer-scale attenuation lengths for cold polar ice. These are also the first such measurements for propagation over such large slant distances in ice. Based on these data, ARA-37, the ˜200 km2 array now in its initial construction phase, will achieve the highest sensitivity of any planned or existing neutrino detector in the 1016-1019 eV energy range.<br />SCOPUS: ar.j<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Astroparticle physics, 35
Notes :
2 full-text file(s): application/pdf | application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn837133728
Document Type :
Electronic Resource