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Dive into the research topics where P. Bezyazeekov is active.

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Featured researches published by P. Bezyazeekov.


Physics Letters B | 2016

A comparison of the cosmic-ray energy scales of Tunka-133 and KASCADE-Grande via their radio extensions Tunka-Rex and LOPES

W.D. Apel; J.C. Arteaga-Velázquez; L. Bähren; P. Bezyazeekov; K. Bekk; M. Bertaina; Peter L. Biermann; J. Blümer; H. Bozdog; I.M. Brancus; N. M. Budnev; E. Cantoni; A. Chiavassa; K. Daumiller; V. de Souza; F. Di Pierro; P. Doll; R. Engel; H. Falcke; O. Fedorov; B. Fuchs; H. Gemmeke; O. Gress; C. Grupen; A. Haungs; D. Heck; R. Hiller; J.R. Hörandel; A. Horneffer; D. Huber

Abstract The radio technique is a promising method for detection of cosmic-ray air showers of energies around 100 PeV and higher with an array of radio antennas. Since the amplitude of the radio signal can be measured absolutely and increases with the shower energy, radio measurements can be used to determine the air-shower energy on an absolute scale. We show that calibrated measurements of radio detectors operated in coincidence with host experiments measuring air showers based on other techniques can be used for comparing the energy scales of these host experiments. Using two approaches, first via direct amplitude measurements, and second via comparison of measurements with air shower simulations, we compare the energy scales of the air-shower experiments Tunka-133 and KASCADE-Grande, using their radio extensions, Tunka-Rex and LOPES, respectively. Due to the consistent amplitude calibration for Tunka-Rex and LOPES achieved by using the same reference source, this comparison reaches an accuracy of approximately 10 % – limited by some shortcomings of LOPES, which was a prototype experiment for the digital radio technique for air showers. In particular we show that the energy scales of cosmic-ray measurements by the independently calibrated experiments KASCADE-Grande and Tunka-133 are consistent with each other on this level.


arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2017

Towards a cosmic-ray mass-composition study at Tunka Radio Extension

D. Kostunin; P. Bezyazeekov; N. M. Budnev; O. Fedorov; O. Gress; A. Haungs; R. Hiller; T. Huege; Y. Kazarina; M. Kleifges; E. E. Korosteleva; O. Krömer; V. Kungel; L. Kuzmichev; N. Lubsandorzhiev; R. R. Mirgazov; R. Monkhoev; E. Osipova; A. Pakhorukov; L. Pankov; V. Prosin; G. Rubtsov; F.G. Schröder; R. Wischnewski; A. Zagorodnikov

The Tunka Radio Extension (Tunka-Rex) is a radio detector at the TAIGA facility located in Siberia nearby the southern tip of Lake Baikal. Tunka-Rex measures air-showers induced by high-energy cosmic rays, in particular, the lateral distribution of the radio pulses. The depth of the air-shower maximum, statistically depends on the mass of the primary particle, is determined from the slope of the lateral distribution function (LDF). Using a model-independent approach, we have studied possible features of the one-dimensional slope method and tried to find improvements for the reconstruction of primary mass. To study the systematic uncertainties given by different primary particles, we have performed simulations using the CONEX and CoREAS software packages of the recently released CORSIKA v7.5 including the modern high-energy hadronic models QGSJet-II.04 and EPOS-LHC. The simulations have shown that the largest systematic uncertainty in the energy deposit is due to the unknown primary particle. Finally, we studied the relation between the polarization and the asymmetry of the LDF.


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 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.


Physics of Atomic Nuclei | 2018

TAIGA Gamma Observatory: Status and Prospects

L. A. Kuzmichev; I. I. Astapov; P. Bezyazeekov; V. Boreyko; A. Borodin; Nikolay M. Budnev; R. Wischnewski; A. Garmash; Aleksandr Gafarov; N. Gorbunov; V. Grebenyuk; O. Gress; T. Gress; A. Grinyuk; O. G. Grishin; A. Dyachok; A. Zagorodnikov; V. L. Zurbanov; A. Ivanova; Y. Kazarina; N. N. Kalmykov; N. I. Karpov; V. V. Kindin; P. Kirilenko; S. Kiryuhin; V. Kozhin; R. P. Kokoulin; K. G. Kompaniets; E. E. Korosteleva; E. A. Kravchenko

Over the past few years, the TAIGA (Tunka Advanced Instrument for cosmic ray physics and Gamma-ray Astronomy) observatory has been being deployed in the Tunka Valley, Republic of Buryatia. It is designed for studying gamma rays of energy above 30 TeV and performing searches for sources of galactic cosmic rays with energies in the vicinity of 1 PeV, which is an energy region around the classic knee in the cosmic-ray energy spectrum. The first phase of the observatory will be situated at a distance of about 50 km from Lake Baikal at the site of the Tunka-133 array. The TAIGA gamma observatory will include a network of 500 wide-angle (0.6 sr) Cherenkov detectors (TAIGA-HiSCORE array) and up to 16 atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes (ACT) designed for analyzing the EAS images (imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes, or IACT) and positioned within an area of 5 km2. The observatory will also include muon detectors of total area 2000 m2 distributed over an area of 1 km2. Within the next three years, it is planned to enhance the area of the TAIGA-HiSCORE array by a factor of four—from 0.25 km2 to 1 km2; to supplement the existing IACT with two new ones; and to deploy new muon detectors with a total coverage of 200 m2. The structure of the new observatory is described along with the data analysis techniques used. The most interesting physical results are presented, and the research program for the future is discussed.


arXiv: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena | 2017

Tunka-Rex: Status, Plans, and Recent Results

F.G. Schröder; P. Bezyazeekov; N. M. Budnev; O. Fedorov; O. Gress; A. Haungs; R. Hiller; T. Huege; Y. Kazarina; M. Kleifges; E. E. Korosteleva; D. Kostunin; O. Krömer; V. Kungel; L. Kuzmichev; N. Lubsandorzhiev; R. R. Mirgazov; R. Monkhoev; E. Osipova; A. Pakhorukov; L. Pankov; V. Prosin; G. Rubtsov; R. Wischnewski; A. Zagorodnikov

Tunka-Rex, the Tunka Radio extension at the TAIGA facility (Tunka Advanced Instrument for cosmic ray physics and Gamma Astronomy) in Siberia, has recently been expanded to a total number of 63 SALLA antennas, most of them distributed on an area of one square kilometer. In the first years of operation, Tunka-Rex was solely triggered by the co-located air-Cherenkov array Tunka-133. The correlation of the measurements by both detectors has provided direct experimental proof that radio arrays can measure the position of the shower maximum. The precision achieved so far is 40 g/cm2 , and several methodical improvements are under study. Moreover, the cross-comparison of Tunka-Rex and Tunka-133 shows that the energy reconstruction of Tunka-Rex is precise to 15 %, with a total accuracy of 20 % including the absolute energy scale. By using exactly the same calibration source for Tunka-Rex and LOPES, the energy scale of their host experiments, Tunka-133 and KASCADE-Grande, respectively, can be compared even more accurately with a remaining uncertainty of about 10 %. The main goal of Tunka-Rex for the next years is a study of the cosmic-ray mass composition in the energy range above 100 PeV: For this purpose, Tunka-Rex now is triggered also during daytime by the particle detector array Tunka-Grande featuring surface and underground scintillators for electron and muon detection.


Proceedings of 35th International Cosmic Ray Conference — PoS(ICRC2017) | 2017

TAIGA-HiSCORE detection of the CATS-Lidar on the ISS as fast moving point source

R. Wischnewski; A. Porelli; A. Garmash; I. I. Astapov; P. Bezyazeekov; V. Boreyko; A. Borodin; M. Brueckner; N. M. Budnev; A. Chiavassa; A. Dyachok; O. Fedorov; Aleksandr Gafarov; N. Gorbunov; E. Gorbovskoy; Victor Grebenyuk; O. Gress; T. Gress; O. Grishin; A. Grinyuk; D. Horns; A. Ivanova; N. N. Kalmykov; Y. Kazarina; V. V. Kindin; P. Kirilenko; S. Kiryuhin; R. P. Kokoulin; K. G. Kompaniets; E. E. Korosteleva

We report the first ground-based observation of the CATS-LIDAR onboard the ISS by the TAIGA-HiSCORE gamma-ray facility, and the MASTER-Tunka Robotic telescope. HiSCORE detects unscattered laser light directly from the ISS, at up to km-scale distance from the laser beam spot on ground. The ISS-LIDAR turns out to be a unique calibration tool, in particular to verify the absolute astronomical pointing of HiSCORE. We detected the LIDAR for 11 ISS-passages; among these were observations of forward scattering of the laser beam in dense clouds, which might carry information complementary to the LIDAR technique. We expect other air Cherenkov installations like IACTs to benefit from this light source.


Proceedings of 35th International Cosmic Ray Conference — PoS(ICRC2017) | 2017

Overview on the Tunka-Rex antenna array for cosmic-ray air showers

F.G. Schröder; N. M. Budnev; Daria Chernykh; O. Fedorov; O. Gress; A. Haungs; R. Hiller; Tim Huege; Y. Kazarina; M. Kleifges; E. E. Korosteleva; D. Kostunin; O. Krömer; Leonid Kuzmichev; V. Lenok; N. Lubsandorzhiev; Tatiana Marshalkina; R. R. Mirgazov; R. Monkhoev; Eleonora Osipova; A. Pakhorukov; L. Pankov; V. Prosin; A. Zagorodnikov; P. Bezyazeekov

Tunka-Rex is a


Proceedings of 35th International Cosmic Ray Conference — PoS(ICRC2017) | 2017

Detector efficiency and exposure of Tunka-Rex for cosmic-ray air showers

O. Fedorov; P. Bezyazeekov; N. M. Budnev; Daria Chernykh; O. Gress; A. Haungs; R. Hiller; Y. Kazarina; M. Kleifges; D. Kostunin; E. E. Korosteleva; O. Krömer; Leonid Kuzmichev; V. Lenok; N. Lubsandorzhiev; Tatiana Marshalkina; R. R. Mirgazov; R. Monkhoev; Eleonora Osipova; A. Pakhorukov; L. Pankov; V. Prosin; F.G. Schröder; A. Zagorodnikov

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Proceedings of 35th International Cosmic Ray Conference — PoS(ICRC2017) | 2017

TAIGA-HiSCORE: results from the first two operation seasons

M. Tluczykont; O. Gress; E. E. Korosteleva; L. A. Kuzmichev; A. Pakhorukov; A. Porelli; V. Prosin; L.G. Sveshnikova; R. Wischnewski; I. I. Astapov; P. Bezyazeekov; V. Boreyko; A. Borodin; M. Brueckner; N. M. Budnev; A. Chiavassa; A. Dyachok; O. Fedorov; Aleksandr Gafarov; A. Garmash; N. Gorbunov; Victor Grebenyuk; T. Gress; O. Grishin; A. Grinyuk; D. Horns; A. Ivanova; N. N. Kalmykov; Y. Kazarina; V. V. Kindin

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O. Gress

Irkutsk State University

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Y. Kazarina

Irkutsk State University

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O. Fedorov

Irkutsk State University

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N. M. Budnev

Irkutsk State University

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A. Haungs

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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D. Kostunin

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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R. Hiller

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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L. Pankov

Irkutsk State University

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