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Dive into the research topics where R. D. Dagkesamanskii is active.

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Featured researches published by R. D. Dagkesamanskii.


arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2015

Lunar detection of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays and neutrinos with the Square Kilometre Array

Justin D. Bray; J. Alvarez-Muñiz; S. Buitink; R. D. Dagkesamanskii; R. D. Ekers; H. Falcke; K. G. Gayley; T. Huege; C.W. James; M. Mevius; R. L. Mutel; R. J. Protheroe; Olaf Scholten; F. Schroeder; R. E. Spencer; S. ter Veen

The origin of the most energetic particles in nature, the ultra-high-energy (UHE) cosmic rays, is still a mystery. Due to their extremely low flux, even the 3,000 km^2 Pierre Auger detector registers only about 30 cosmic rays per year with sufficiently high energy to be used for directional studies. A method to provide a vast increase in collecting area is to use the lunar technique, in which ground-based radio telescopes search for the nanosecond radio flashes produced when a cosmic ray interacts with the Moons surface. The technique is also sensitive to the associated flux of UHE neutrinos, which are expected from cosmic ray interactions during production and propagation, and the detection of which can also be used to identify the UHE cosmic ray source(s). An additional flux of UHE neutrinos may also be produced in the decays of topological defects from the early Universe. Observations with existing radio telescopes have shown that this technique is technically feasible, and established the required procedure: the radio signal should be searched for pulses in real time, compensating for ionospheric dispersion and filtering out local radio interference, and candidate events stored for later analysis. For the SKA, this requires the formation of multiple tied-array beams, with high time resolution, covering the Moon, with either SKA-LOW or SKA-MID. With its large collecting area and broad bandwidth, the SKA will be able to detect the known flux of UHE cosmic rays using the visible lunar surface - millions of square km - as the detector, providing sufficient detections of these extremely rare particles to solve the mystery of their origin.


7th International Conference on Acoustic and Radio EeV Neutrino Detection Activities (ARENA 2016), Groningen, The Netherlands, Edited by Buitink, S.; Hörandel, J.R.; de Jong, S.; Lahmann, R.; Nahnhauer, R.; Scholten, O.; EPJ Web of Conferences | 2017

Overview of lunar detection of ultra-high energy particles and new plans for the SKA

C.W. James; J. Alvarez-Muñiz; Justin D. Bray; Stijn Buitink; R. D. Dagkesamanskii; R. D. Ekers; H. Falcke; K. G. Gayley; T. Huege; M. Mevius; Rob Mutel; Olaf Scholten; R. E. Spencer; Sander ter Veen; T. Winchen

The lunar technique is a method for maximising the collection area for ultra-high-energy (UHE) cosmic ray and neutrino searches. The method uses either ground-based radio telescopes or lunar orbiters to search for Askaryan emission from particles cascading near the lunar surface. While experiments using the technique have made important advances in the detection of nanosecond-scale pulses, only at the very highest energies has the lunar technique achieved competitive limits. This is expected to change with the advent of the Square Kilometre Array (SKA), the low-frequency component of which (SKA-low) is predicted to be able to detect an unprecedented number of UHE cosmic rays.In this contribution, the status of lunar particle detection is reviewed, with particular attention paid to outstanding theoretical questions, and the technical challenges of using a giant radio array to search for nanosecond pulses. The activities of SKA’s High Energy Cosmic Particles Focus Group are described, as is a roadmap by which this group plans to incorporate this detection mode into SKA-low observations. Estimates for the sensitivity of SKA-low phases 1 and 2 to UHE particles are given, along with the achievable science goals with each stage. Prospects for near-future observations with other instruments are also described.


EPJ Web of Conferences | 2017

Development of the radio astronomical method of cosmic particle detection for extremely high-energy cosmic ray physics and neutrino astronomy

I. Zheleznykh; R. D. Dagkesamanskii; L. G. Dedenko; Grigorii Dedenko

The proposal to use ground based radio telescopes for detection of Askaryan radio pulses from particle cascades arising when extremely high-energy (EHE > 1020 eV) cosmic rays (including neutrinos) interact with the lunar regolith of multi gigaton mass was made at the end of 1980s in the framework of the Russian (Soviet) DUMAND Program. During more than a quarter of century a number of lunar experiments were carried out mainly in the 1–3 GHz frequency range using the large radio telescopes of Australia, USA, Russia and other countries but these experiments only put upper limits to the EHE cosmic rays fluxes. For this reason, it would be of great interest to search for nanosecond radio pulses from the Moon in a wider interval of frequencies (including lower ones of 100–350 MHz) with larger radio detectors – for example the giant radio telescope SKA (Square Kilometer Array) which is constructed in Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. In this paper possibilities are discussed to use one of the most sensitive meter-wavelength (∼ 110 MHz) Large Phased Array (LPA) of 187 × 384 m2 and the wide field of view meter-wavelength array of the Pushchino Radio Astronomy Observatory as prototypes of low frequency radio detectors for lunar experiments. The new scheme for fast simulation of ultrahigh and extremely high-energy cascades in dense media is also suggested. This scheme will be used later for calculations of radio emission of cascades in the lunar regolith with energies up to 1020 eV and higher in the wide frequency band of 0.1− a few GHz.


arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2016

The lunar Askaryan technique : a technical roadmap

Justin D. Bray; J. Alvarez-Muñiz; S. Buitink; R. D. Dagkesamanskii; R. D. Ekers; H. Falcke; K. G. Gayley; T. Huege; C.W. James; M. Mevius; R. L. Mutel; R. J. Protheroe; Olaf Scholten; R. E. Spencer; S. ter Veen

The lunar Askaryan technique, which involves searching for Askaryan radio pulses from particle cascades in the outer layers of the Moon, is a method for using the lunar surface as an extremely large detector of ultra-high-energy particles. The high time resolution required to detect these pulses, which have a duration of around a nanosecond, puts this technique in a regime quite different from other forms of radio astronomy, with a unique set of associated technical challenges which have been addressed in a series of experiments by various groups. Implementing the methods and techniques developed by these groups for detecting lunar Askaryan pulses will be important for a future experiment with the Square Kilometre Array (SKA), which is expected to have sufficient sensitivity to allow the first positive detection using this technique. Key issues include correction for ionospheric dispersion, beamforming, efficient triggering, and the exclusion of spurious events from radio-frequency interference. We review the progress in each of these areas, and consider the further progress expected for future application with the SKA.


Physics-Uspekhi | 2009

P N Lebedev Physical Institute RAS ? 75 years(Joint session of the P N Lebedev Physical Institute Research Council and the Scientific session of the Physical Sciences Division of the Russian Academy of Sciences and the United Physical Society of the Russian Federation, 6 April 2009)

Gennadii A. Mesyats; Boris M. Bolotovskii; Yurii V. Kopaev; Nikolai S. Kardashev; Georgii T Zatsepin; T. M. Roganova; Anatolii V. Masalov; Mikhail A. Gubin; V. L. Velichansky; R. D. Dagkesamanskii


Physics-Uspekhi | 2009

The Pushchino Radio Astronomy Observatory of the P N Lebedev Physical Institute Astro Space Center: yesterday, today, and tomorrow

R. D. Dagkesamanskii


Archive | 2015

Astroparticle physics with the square kilometre array

C.W. James; J. Alvarez-Muñiz; Justin D. Bray; S. Buitink; R. D. Dagkesamanskii; R. Dallier; R. D. Ekers; H. Falcke; K. G. Gayley; T. Heuge; L. Martin; M. Mevius; R. L. Mutel; R. J. Protheroe; B. Revenu; Olaf Scholten; F. Schroeder; R. E. Spencer; S. Ter Veen


Archive | 2015

Proceedings of the 34th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC 2015), The Hague, The Netherlands

Justin D. Bray; J. Alvarez-Muñiz; S. Buitink; R. D. Dagkesamanskii; R. D. Ekers; H. Falcke; K. G. Gayley; T. Huege; C.W. James; M. Mevius; R. L. Mutel; R. J. Protheroe; Olaf Scholten; R. E. Spencer; S. ter Veen


arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2014

Lunar detection of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays and neutrinos

Justin D. Bray; J. Alvarez-Muñiz; S. Buitink; R. D. Dagkesamanskii; R. D. Ekers; H. Falcke; K. G. Gayley; T. Huege; C.W. James; M. Mevius; R. L. Mutel; R. J. Protheroe; Olaf Scholten; R. E. Spencer; S. ter Veen


Physics-Uspekhi | 2012

Yurii Nikolaevich Pariiskii (on his 80th birthday)

Yurii Yu Balega; A B Berlin; V M Bogod; I V Gosachinskii; R. D. Dagkesamanskii; V K Dubrovich; Nikolai S. Kardashev; I V Kostyuk; M G Mingaliev; G A Pinchuk; Adelina V Temirova; Petr Aleksandrovich Fridman

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C.W. James

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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J. Alvarez-Muñiz

University of Santiago de Compostela

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R. E. Spencer

University of Manchester

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R. D. Ekers

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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H. Falcke

Radboud University Nijmegen

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M. Mevius

University of Groningen

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T. Huege

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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