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Featured researches published by B. C. Mercurio.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Observations of the Askaryan Effect in Ice

P. Gorham; S. W. Barwick; J. J. Beatty; D. Besson; W. R. Binns; Chuan-Hua Chen; Pisin Chen; J. Clem; A. Connolly; P. F. Dowkontt; Michael A. DuVernois; R. C. Field; D. Goldstein; A. Goodhue; C. Hast; C. L. Hebert; S. Hoover; M. H. Israel; J. Kowalski; J. G. Learned; Kurt Liewer; J. T. Link; Elizabeth R. Lusczek; S. Matsuno; B. C. Mercurio; C. Miki; P. Miočinović; J. W. Nam; C. J. Naudet; J. Ng

We report on observations of coherent, impulsive radio Cherenkov radiation from electromagnetic showers in solid ice. This is the first observation of the Askaryan effect in ice. As part of the complete validation process for the ANITA experiment, we performed an experiment at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center in June 2006 using a 7.5 metric ton ice target. We measure for the first time the large-scale angular dependence of the radiation pattern, a major factor in determining the solid-angle acceptance of ultrahigh-energy neutrino detectors.


Astroparticle Physics | 2009

The Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna ultra-high energy neutrino detector: Design, performance, and sensitivity for the 2006–2007 balloon flight

P. Gorham; P. Allison; S. W. Barwick; J. J. Beatty; D. Besson; W. R. Binns; Chuan-Hua Chen; Pisin Chen; J. Clem; A. Connolly; P. F. Dowkontt; Michael A. DuVernois; R. C. Field; D. Goldstein; A. Goodhue; C. Hast; C. L. Hebert; S. Hoover; M. H. Israel; J. Kowalski; J. G. Learned; Kurt Liewer; J. T. Link; Elizabeth R. Lusczek; S. Matsuno; B. C. Mercurio; C. Miki; P. Miočinović; J. W. Nam; C. J. Naudet

Abstract We present a comprehensive report on the experimental details of the Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna (ANITA) long-duration balloon payload, including the design philosophy and realization, physics simulations, performance of the instrument during its first Antarctic flight completed in January of 2007, and expectations for the limiting neutrino detection sensitivity.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

New Limits on the Ultrahigh Energy Cosmic Neutrino Flux from the ANITA Experiment

P. Gorham; Allison P; S. W. Barwick; J. J. Beatty; D. Besson; W. R. Binns; Chun Hsiung Chen; Pisin Chen; J. Clem; A. Connolly; P. F. Dowkontt; Michael A. DuVernois; R. C. Field; D. Goldstein; A. Goodhue; C. Hast; Hebert Cl; S. Hoover; M. H. Israel; Kowalski J; J. G. Learned; Kurt Liewer; Link Jt; Elizabeth R. Lusczek; Matsuno S; B. C. Mercurio; Christian Miki; Miocinović P; J. W. Nam; C. J. Naudet

We report initial results of the first flight of the Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna (ANITA-1) 2006-2007 Long Duration Balloon flight, which searched for evidence of a diffuse flux of cosmic neutrinos above energies of E(nu) approximately 3 x 10(18) eV. ANITA-1 flew for 35 days looking for radio impulses due to the Askaryan effect in neutrino-induced electromagnetic showers within the Antarctic ice sheets. We report here on our initial analysis, which was performed as a blind search of the data. No neutrino candidates are seen, with no detected physics background. We set model-independent limits based on this result. Upper limits derived from our analysis rule out the highest cosmogenic neutrino models. In a background horizontal-polarization channel, we also detect six events consistent with radio impulses from ultrahigh energy extensive air showers.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Observation of ultrahigh-energy cosmic rays with the ANITA balloon-borne radio interferometer

S. Hoover; Nam J; P. Gorham; Grashorn E; P. Allison; S. W. Barwick; J. J. Beatty; K. Belov; D. Besson; W. R. Binns; C.T. Chen; Pisin Chen; J. Clem; A. Connolly; P. F. Dowkontt; Michael A. DuVernois; R. C. Field; D. Goldstein; Vieregg Ag; C. Hast; M. H. Israel; A. Javaid; J. Kowalski; J. G. Learned; Kurt Liewer; J. T. Link; Elizabeth R. Lusczek; S. Matsuno; B. C. Mercurio; C. Miki

We report the observation of 16 cosmic ray events with a mean energy of 1.5 × 10¹⁹ eV via radio pulses originating from the interaction of the cosmic ray air shower with the Antarctic geomagnetic field, a process known as geosynchrotron emission. We present measurements in the 300-900 MHz range, which are the first self-triggered, first ultrawide band, first far-field, and the highest energy sample of cosmic ray events collected with the radio technique. Their properties are inconsistent with current ground-based geosynchrotron models. The emission is 100% polarized in the plane perpendicular to the projected geomagnetic field. Fourteen events are seen to have a phase inversion due to reflection of the radio beam off the ice surface, and two additional events are seen directly from above the horizon. Based on a likelihood analysis, we estimate angular pointing precision of order 2° for the event arrival directions.


Astroparticle Physics | 2008

In situ radioglaciological measurements near Taylor Dome, Antarctica and implications for ultra-high energy (UHE) neutrino astronomy

D. Besson; J. Jenkins; S. Matsuno; J. W. Nam; M. Smith; S. W. Barwick; J. J. Beatty; W. R. Binns; Chuan-Hua Chen; Pisin Chen; J. Clem; A. Connolly; P. F. Dowkontt; M.A. DuVernois; R. C. Field; D. Goldstein; P. Gorham; A. Goodhue; C. Hast; C. L. Hebert; S. Hoover; M. H. Israel; J. Kowalski; J. G. Learned; Kurt Liewer; J.T. Link; Elizabeth R. Lusczek; B. C. Mercurio; C. Miki; P. Miočinović

Radiowave detection of the Cherenkov radiation produced by neutrino-ice collisions requires an understanding of the radiofrequency (RF) response of cold polar ice. We herein report on a series of radioglaciological measurements performed approximately 10 km north of Taylor Dome Station, Antarctica from Dec. 6, 2006 - Dec. 16, 2006. Using RF signals broadcast from: a) an englacial discone, submerged to a depth of 100 meters and broadcasting to a surface dual polarization horn receiver, and b) a dual-polarization horn antenna on the surface transmitting signals which reflect off the underlying bed and back up to the surface receiver, we have made time-domain estimates of both the real (index-of-refraction) and imaginary (attenuation length) components of the complex ice dielectric constant. We have also measured the uniformity of ice response along two orthogonal axes in the horizontal plane. We observe a wavespeed asymmetry of order 0.1%, projected onto the vertical propagation axis, consistent with some previous measurements, but somewhat lower than others.


Physical Review D | 2011

Ultra-Relativistic Magnetic Monopole Search with the ANITA-II Balloon-borne Radio Interferometer

M. Detrixhe; D. Besson; P. Gorham; P. Allison; B. Baughmann; J. J. Beatty; K. Belov; Simon Bevan; W. R. Binns; Chun Hsiung Chen; Pisin Chen; J. Clem; A. Connolly; D. De Marco; P. F. Dowkontt; M. A. DuVernois; C. Frankenfeld; E. Grashorn; D. P. Hogan; N. Griffith; B. Hill; S. Hoover; M. H. Israel; A. Javaid; Kurt Liewer; S. Matsuno; B. C. Mercurio; C. Miki; M. Mottram; J. W. Nam

We have conducted a search for extended energy deposition trails left by ultrarelativistic magnetic monopoles interacting in Antarctic ice. The nonobservation of any satisfactory candidates in the 31 days of accumulated ANITA-II (Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna) flight data results in an upper limit on the diffuse flux of relativistic monopoles. We obtain a 90% C.L. limit of order 10{sup -19} (cm{sup 2} s sr){sup -1} for values of Lorentz factor, {gamma}, 10{sup 10{<=}{gamma}} at the anticipated energy E{sub tot}=10{sup 16} GeV. This bound is stronger than all previously published experimental limits for this kinematic range.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

THE FIRST LIMITS ON THE ULTRA-HIGH ENERGY NEUTRINO FLUENCE FROM GAMMA-RAY BURSTS

A. G. Vieregg; K. Palladino; P. Allison; B. M. Baughman; J. J. Beatty; K. Belov; D. Besson; S. Bevan; W. R. Binns; C.T. Chen; Pisin Chen; J. Clem; A. Connolly; M. Detrixhe; D. De Marco; P. F. Dowkontt; M. DuVernois; P. Gorham; Grashorn E; B. Hill; S. Hoover; M.A. Huang; M. H. Israel; A. Javaid; Kurt Liewer; S. Matsuno; B. C. Mercurio; C. Miki; M. Mottram; J. W. Nam

We set the first limits on the ultra-high energy (UHE) neutrino fluence at energies greater than 10{sup 9} GeV from gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) based on data from the second flight of the Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna (ANITA). During the 31 day flight of ANITA-II, 26 GRBs were recorded by Swift or Fermi. Of these, we analyzed the 12 GRBs which occurred during quiet periods when the payload was away from anthropogenic activity. In a blind analysis, we observe 0 events on a total background of 0.0044 events in the combined prompt window for all 12 low-background bursts. We also observe 0 events from the remaining 14 bursts. We place a 90% confidence level limit on the E{sup -4} prompt neutrino fluence between 10{sup 8} GeV < E < 10{sup 12} GeV of E{sup 4}{Phi} = 2.5 x 10{sup 17} GeV{sup 3} cm{sup -2} from GRB090107A. This is the first reported limit on the UHE neutrino fluence from GRBs above 10{sup 9} GeV, and the strongest limit above 10{sup 8} GeV.


Journal Name: J.Phys.Conf.Ser.136:022052,2008; Conference: Prepared for 23rd International Conference on Neutrino Physics and Astrophysics (Neutrino 2008), Christchurch, New Zealand, 26-31 May 2008 | 2008

Initial results from the ANITA 2006-2007 Balloon Flight

P. Gorham; P. Allison; S. W. Barwick; J. J. Beatty; D. Besson; W. R. Binns; Chuan-Hua Chen; Pisin Chen; J. Clem; A. Connolly; P. F. Dowkontt; Michael A. DuVernois; R. C. Field; D. Goldstein; A. Goodhue; C. Hast; C. L. Hebert; S. Hoover; M. H. Israel; J. Kowalski; J. G. Learned; Kurt Liewer; J. T. Link; Elizabeth R. Lusczek; S. Matsuno; B. C. Mercurio; C. Miki; P. Miočinović; J. W. Nam; C. J. Naudet

We report initial results of the Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna (ANITA) 2006-2007 Long Duration Balloon flight, which searched for evidence of the flux of cosmogenic neutrinos. ANITA flew for 35 days looking for radio impulses that might be due to the Askaryan effect in neutrino-induced electromagnetic showers within the Antarctic ice sheets. In our initial high-threshold robust analysis, no neutrino candidates are seen, with no physics background. In a non-signal horizontal-polarization channel, we do detect 6 events consistent with radio impulses from extensive air showers, which helps to validate the effectiveness of our method. Upper limits derived from our analysis now begin to eliminate the highest cosmogenic neutrino models.


arXiv: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena | 2017

Upward-Pointing Cosmic-Ray-like Events Observed with ANITA

A. Romero-Wolf; J. W. Nam; S. Hoover; P. Gorham; P. Allison; L. Batten; J. J. Beatty; K. Belov; D. Besson; W. R. Binns; P. Cao; Chun Hsiung Chen; P. Chen; J. Clem; A. Connolly; B. Dailey; C. Deaconu; L. Cremonesi; P. F. Dowkontt; M. A. DuVernois; R. C. Field; D. Goldstein; J. Gordon; C. Hast; C. L. Hebert; B. Hill; K. Hughes; R. Hupe; M. H. Israel; A. Javaid

These proceedings address a recent publication by the ANITA collaboration of four upward- pointing cosmic-ray-like events observed in the first flight of ANITA. Three of these events were consistent with stratospheric cosmic-ray air showers where the axis of propagation does not inter- sect the surface of the Earth. The fourth event was consistent with a primary particle that emerges from the surface of the ice suggesting a possible {\tau}-lepton decay as the origin of this event. These proceedings follow-up on the modeling and testing of the hypothesis that this event was of {\tau} neutrino origin.


Modern Physics Letters A | 2008

PRELIMINARY RESULT FROM ANITA EXPERIMENT

J. W. Nam; P. Gorham; S. W. Barwick; J. J. Beatty; D. Besson; W. R. Binns; Chih-Ching Chen; Pisin Chen; J. Clem; A. Connolly; P. F. Dowkontt; Michael A. DuVernois; R. C. Field; D. Goldstein; A. Goodhue; C. Hast; C. L. Hebert; S. Hoover; M. H. Israel; A. Javaid; J. Kowalski; J. G. Learned; Kurt Liewer; J. T. Link; Elizabeth R. Lusczek; S. Matsuno; B. C. Mercurio; C. Miki; P. Miočinović; C. J. Naudet

The ANITA (ANtarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna) experiment is a balloon-borne neutrino telescope which consists of an array of 32 broad-band horn antennas. It successfully completed a 35 day flight over Antarctica during the 2006-2007 austral summer. The primary goal of ANITA is to search for astrophysical neutrinos with energies E > 1019eV by detecting radio Cherenkov signals from neutrino induced showers in the Antarctic ice. We present preliminary results from ongoing analyses of ANITA data.

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S. Hoover

University of California

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J. Clem

University of Delaware

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W. R. Binns

Washington University in St. Louis

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M. H. Israel

Washington University in St. Louis

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P. F. Dowkontt

Washington University in St. Louis

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Pisin Chen

National Taiwan University

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