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Featured researches published by M. Kunnas.


HIGH ENERGY GAMMA-RAY ASTRONOMY: 5th International Meeting on High Energy Gamma-Ray Astronomy | 2012

HiSCORE - The Hundred*i square-km cosmic ORigin explorer

M. Tluczykont; D. Hampf; U. Einhaus; D. Horns; M. Brückner; Nikolay M. Budnev; M Büker; O. Chvalaev; A. Dyachok; S. Epimakhov; O. Gress; A. Ivanova; E.N. Konstantinov; E. E. Korosteleva; M. Kunnas; L. Kuzmichev; B. K. Lubsandorzhiev; N. Lubsandorzhiev; R. R. Mirgazov; R. Nachtigall; A. Pakhorukov; V. Poleschuk; V. Prosin; G. Rubtsov; P Satunin; Yu. Semeney; C. Spiering; L.G. Sveshnikova; R. Wischnewski; A. Zagorodnikov

Addressing the mysteries of cosmic rays requires a comprehensive observational approach, including information on mass composition and spectrum (from CR nuclei) as well as directional information (gamma-rays or neutrinos). HiSCORE covers both approaches using indirect air-shower observations of cosmic rays from 100 TeV to 1 EeV and gamma-rays in the so far poorly covered energy range from 10 TeV to several PeV. Among other questions of astroparticle and particle physics, HiSCORE will allow cosmic ray composition and spectral measurements in the transition range between Galactic and Extragalactic origin. Searching for gamma-rays from the PeV-accelerators, the pevatrons, will consititute a crucial building-block for solving the question of the origin of Galactic cosmic rays. HiSCORE is an array of non-imaging light-collecting stations for Cherenkov light-front sampling. The lateral Cherenkov photon density and arrival-time distribution are measured, allowing the reconstruction of the direction, the energy, ...


Bulletin of The Russian Academy of Sciences: Physics | 2015

First results from the operation of the prototype Tunka-HiSCORE array

S.F. Berezhnev; N. M. Budnev; M. Büker; M. Brückner; R. Wischnewski; A. V. Gafarov; O. Gress; T. Gress; A. Dyachok; Sergey N. Epimakhov; A. Zagorodnikov; V. L. Zurbanov; N. N. Kalmykov; N. I. Karpov; E. N. Konstantinov; E. E. Korosteleva; V. Kozhin; M. Kunnas; L. A. Kuzmichev; A. Chiavassa; B. Lubsandorzhiev; N. B. Lubsandorzhiev; R. R. Mirgazov; R. Monkhoev; R. Nachtigall; A. Pakhorukov; M. I. Panasyuk; L. Pankov; A. Porelli; V. A. Poleshchuk

The Tunka-HISCORE wide-angle Cherenkov array, one part of the planned TAIGA integrated gamma observatory intended for investigations in the field of high-energy (>30 TeV) gamma-ray astronomy and cosmic-ray physics, is deployed in the Tunka Valley (Buryat Republic). The first results from operating a prototype array composed of nine stations spread over an area of ∼0.1 square kilometers during the winter of 2013–2014 are presented. Data processing techniques are described, along with data on the accuracy of reconstructing the position of a shower’s axis, energy, and angle of arrival. The differential spectrum of all cosmic-ray particles in a shower in the energy range of 2 × 1014 to 2 × 1016 eV is presented and compared to the available data.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2015

Timing calibration and directional reconstruction for Tunka-HiSCORE

A. Porelli; D Bogorodskii; M. Brückner; Nikolay M. Budnev; O. Chvalaev; A. Dyachok; S. Epimakhov; T Eremin; O. Gress; T. Gress; D. Horns; A. Ivanova; S Kiruhin; E.N. Konstantinov; E. E. Korosteleva; M. Kunnas; L. A. Kuzmichev; B. Lubsandorzhiev; N Lubsandorzhiev; R. R. Mirgazov; R. Mirzoyan; R. Monkhoev; R. Nachtigall; A. Pakhorukov; V Platonov; V. Poleschuk; V. Prosin; G. Rubtsov; M. Rüger; V. Samoliga

The Tunka-HiSCORE detector follows the concept of a non-imaging wide-angle EAS Cherenkov array, designed to search for γ-ray sources above 10 TeV and to investigate the spectrum and composition of cosmic-rays above 100 TeV. A prototype array with 9 stations has been deployed in October 2013 at the site of the Tunka experiment in Russia. We describe design and performance of the array data acquisition system DAQ-2, focusing on its timing system based on the White Rabbit technology for sub-nsec time-synchronization over ethernet. First results of EAS arrival direction reconstruction, compared with MC simulations, and tests with artifical light sources verify an excellent performance of the system.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2016

The TAIGA experiment: from cosmic ray to gamma-ray astronomy in the Tunka valley

Nikolay M. Budnev; I. I. Astapov; P. Bezyazeekov; A. G. Bogdanov; V. Boreyko; M Büker; M. Brückner; A. Chiavassa; O. Chvalaev; O. Gress; T. Gress; O. Grishin; A. Dyachok; S. Epimakhov; O. Fedorov; Aleksandr Gafarov; N. Gorbunov; V. Grebenyuk; A. Grinuk; A. Haungs; R. Hiller; D. Horns; T. Huege; A. Ivanova; A Kalinin; N. Karpov; N. N. Kalmykov; Y. Kazarina; N. Kirichkov; S. Kiryuhin

The physical motivations and advantages of the new gamma-observatory TAIGA (Tunka Advanced Instrument for cosmic ray physics and Gamma Astronomy) is presented. The TAIGA array is a complex, hybrid detector for ground-based gamma-ray astronomy for energies from a few TeV to several PeV as well as for cosmic ray studies from 100 TeV to several EeV. The TAIGA will include the wide angle Cherenkov array TAIGA-HiSCORE with ~5 km2 area, a net of 16 I ACT telescopes (with FOV of about 10x10 degree), muon detectors with a total area of up to 2000-3000 m2 and the radio array Tunka-Rex.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2016

The Taiga project

I. I. Yashin; I. I. Astapov; N. S. Barbashina; A. G. Bogdanov; V. Boreyko; N. M. Budnev; M Büker; M. Brückner; A. Chiavassa; O. Chvalaev; A. V. Gafarov; N. Gorbunov; V. Grebenyuk; O. Gress; A. Grinyuk; O. G. Grishin; A. Dyachok; S. Epimakhov; T Eremin; D. Horns; A. Ivanova; N. N. Kalmykov; N. I. Karpov; Y. Kazarina; V. V. Kindin; N. Kirichkov; S. Kiryuhin; R P Kokouli; K. G. Kompaniets; E.N. Konstantinov

The TAIGA project is aimed at solving the fundamental problems of gamma-ray astronomy and physics of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays with the help of the complex of detectors, located in the Tunka valley (Siberia, Russia). TAIGA includes a wide-angle large area Tunka-HiSCORE array, designed to detect gamma-rays of ultrahigh energies in the range 20 - 1000 TeV and charged cosmic rays with energies of 100 TeV - 100 PeV, large area muon detector to improve the rejection of background EAS protons and nuclei and a network of imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes for gamma radiation detection. We discuss the goals and objectives of the complex features of each detector and the results obtained in the first stage of the HiSCORE installation.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2015

Towards gamma-ray astronomy with timing arrays

M. Tluczykont; I. I. Astapov; N. S. Barbashina; S.F. Beregnev; A. G. Bogdanov; D Bogorodskii; V. Boreyko; M. Brückner; N. M. Budnev; A. Chiavassa; O. Chvalaev; A. Dyachok; S. Epimakhov; T Eremin; Aleksandr Gafarov; N. Gorbunov; V. Grebenyuk; O. Gress; T. Gress; A. Grinyuk; O. Grishin; D. Horns; A. Ivanova; N. Karpov; N. N. Kalmykov; Y. Kazarina; V. V. Kindin; N. Kirichkov; S. Kiryuhin; R. P. Kokoulin

The gamma-ray energy regime beyond 10 TeV is crucial for the search for the most energetic Galactic accelerators. The energy spectra of most known gamma-ray emitters only reach up to few 10s of TeV, with 80 TeV from the Crab Nebula being the highest energy so far observed significantly. Uncovering their spectral shape up to few 100 TeV could answer the question whether some of these objects are cosmic ray Pevatrons, i.e. Galactic PeV accelerators.Sensitive observations in this energy range and beyond require very large effective detector areas of several 10s to 100 square-km. While imaging air Cherenkov telescopes have proven to be the instruments of choice in the GeV to TeV energy range, very large area telescope arrays are limited by the number of required readout channels per instrumented square-km (due to the large number of channels per telescope). Alternatively, the shower-front sampling technique allows to instrument large effective areas and also naturally provides large viewing angles of the instrument. Solely measuring the shower front light density and timing (hence timing- arrays), the primary particle properties are reconstructed on the basis of the measured lateral density function and the shower front arrival times. This presentation gives an overview of the technique, its goals, and future perspective.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2017

TAIGA experiment: present status and perspectives

N. M. Budnev; I. I. Astapov; P. Bezyazeekov; V. Boreyko; A. Borodin; M. Brückner; A. Chiavassa; Aleksandr Gafarov; V. Grebenyuk; O. Gress; T. Gress; A. Grinyuk; O. Grishin; A. Dyachok; O. Fedorov; A. Haungs; D. Horns; T. Huege; A. Ivanova; N. N. Kalmykov; Y. Kazarina; V. V. Kindin; S. Kiryuhin; R. P. Kokoulin; K. G. Kompaniets; D. Kostunin; E. E. Korosteleva; V. Kozhin; E. A. Kravchenko; M. Kunnas

The TAIGA observatory addresses ground-based gamma-ray astronomy at energies from a few TeV to several PeV, as well as cosmic ray physics from 100 TeV to several EeV . TAIGA will be located in the Tunka valley, ~ 50 km West from Lake Baikal. The different detectors of the TAIGA will be grouped in 6 arrays to measure Cherenkov and radio emission as well as electron and muon components of atmospheric showers. The combination of the wide angle Cherenkov detectors of the TAIGA-HiSCORE array and the 4-m Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescopes of the TAIGA-IACT array with their FoV of 10×10 degrees and underground muon detectors offers a very cost effective way to construct a 5 km2 array for gamma-ray astronomy.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2015

Amplitude calibration with the HiSCORE-9 array

S. Epimakhov; M Brückner; Nikolay M. Budnev; D Bogorodskii; O. Chvalaev; A. Dyachok; O. Gress; D. Horns; A. Ivanova; S Kiruhin; E.N. Konstantinov; E. E. Korosteleva; M. Kunnas; L. A. Kuzmichev; B. K. Lubsandorzhiev; N. B. Lubsandorzhiev; R. R. Mirgazov; R. Mirzoyan; R. Monkhoev; R. Nachtigall; A. Pakhorukov; V Platonov; V. Poleschuk; A. Porelli; V. Prosin; G. Rubtsov; M Rüger; P Satunin; A Saunkin; Yu. Semeney

HiSCORE is a non-imaging wide-angle Cherenkov array for the detection of extensive air showers induced by ultrahigh energy gamma-rays above 10 TeV and cosmic ray studies above 100 TeV. In October 2013 a 9-station engineering array has been deployed in Tunka valley. For HiSCORE-9, two DAQ systems are being used. The second system is a DRS4 based acquisition system with WhiteRabbit integrated time synchronization. We present the first results on the amplitude calibration from the data of this DAQ system.


Acta Polytechnica CTU Proceedings | 2014

The HiSCORE Project

M. Tluczykont; M. Brückner; N. M. Budnev; O. Chvalaev; A. Dyachok; S. Epimakhov; O. Gress; D. Hampf; D. Horns; A. Ivanova; N. N. Kalmykov; E.N. Konstantinov; E. E. Korosteleva; V. Kozin; M. Kunnas; L. A. Kuzmichev; B. Lubsandorzhiev; R. R. Mirgazov; R. Monkhoev; R. Nachtigall; M. I. Panasyuk; A. Pakhorukov; V. Poleschuk; A. Porelli; V. Prosin; V. S. Ptuskin; G. Rubtsov; P Satunin; Yu. Semeney; D. Spitschan

A central question of Astroparticle Physics, the origin of cosmic rays, still remains unsolved. HiSCORE (Hundred*i Square-km Cosmic ORigin Explorer) is a concept for a large-area wide-angle non-imaging air shower detector, addressing this question by searching for cosmic ray pevatrons in the energy range from 10TeV to few PeV and cosmic rays in the energy range above 100TeV. In the framework of the Tunka-HiSCORE project, first prototypes have been deployed on the site of the Tunka-133 experiment, where we plan to install an engineering array covering an area of the order of 1km 2 . On the same site, also imaging and particle detectors are planned, potentially allowing a future hybrid detector system. Here we present the HiSCORE detector principle, its potential for cosmic ray origin search and the status of ongoing activities in the framework of the Tunka-HiSCORE experiment.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2013

The HiSCORE experiment and its potential for gamma-ray astronomy

M. Tluczykont; D. Hampf; U. Einhaus; D. Horns; M. Brückner; Nikolay M. Budnev; M Büker; O. Chvalaev; A. Dyachok; S. Epimakhov; O. Gress; A. Ivanova; E.N. Konstantinov; E. E. Korosteleva; M. Kunnas; L. A. Kuzmichev; B. Lubsandorzhiev; N. Lubsandorzhiev; A. Maurer; R. R. Mirgazov; R. Nachtigall; A. Pakhorukov; V. Poleschuk; V. Prosin; G.I. Rubtsov; G. Rowell; P Satunin; Yu. Semeney; C. Spiering; L.G. Sveshnikova

The HiSCORE (Hundred*i Square-km Cosmic ORigin Explorer) detector aims at the exploration of the accelerator sky, using indirect air-shower observations of cosmic rays from 100 TeV to 1 EeV and gamma rays in the last remaining observation window of gamma-ray astronomy from 10 TeV to several PeV. The main questions addressed by HiSCORE are cosmic ray composition and spectral measurements in the Galactic/extragalactic transition range, and the origin of cosmic rays via the search for gamma rays from Galactic PeV accelerators, the pevatrons. HiSCORE is based on non-imaging Cherenkov light-front sampling with sensitive large-area detector modules of the order of 0.5 m2. A prototype station was deployed on the Tunka cosmic ray experiment site in Siberia, where an engineering array of up to 1km2 is planned for deployment in 2012/2013. Here, we address the expected physics potential of HiSCORE, the status of the project, and further plans.

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A. Dyachok

Irkutsk State University

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O. Gress

Irkutsk State University

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D. Horns

University of Hamburg

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A. Ivanova

Irkutsk State University

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T. Gress

Irkutsk State University

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Y. Kazarina

Irkutsk State University

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I. I. Astapov

National Research Nuclear University MEPhI

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