S. Buitink
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by S. Buitink.
Nature | 2005
H. Falcke; W.D. Apel; A.F. Badea; L. Bähren; K. Bekk; A. Bercuci; M. Bertaina; Peter L. Biermann; J. Blümer; H. Bozdog; I.M. Brancus; S. Buitink; M. Brüggemann; P. Buchholz; H. R. Butcher; A. Chiavassa; K. Daumiller; A. G. de Bruyn; C. M. de Vos; F. Di Pierro; P. Doll; R. Engel; H. Gemmeke; P. L. Ghia; R. Glasstetter; C. Grupen; A. Haungs; D. Heck; J.R. Hörandel; A. Horneffer
The nature of ultrahigh-energy cosmic rays (UHECRs) at energies >1020u2009eV remains a mystery. They are likely to be of extragalactic origin, but should be absorbed within ∼50u2009Mpc through interactions with the cosmic microwave background. As there are no sufficiently powerful accelerators within this distance from the Galaxy, explanations for UHECRs range from unusual astrophysical sources to exotic string physics. Also unclear is whether UHECRs consist of protons, heavy nuclei, neutrinos or γ-rays. To resolve these questions, larger detectors with higher duty cycles and which combine multiple detection techniques are needed. Radio emission from UHECRs, on the other hand, is unaffected by attenuation, has a high duty cycle, gives calorimetric measurements and provides high directional accuracy. Here we report the detection of radio flashes from cosmic-ray air showers using low-cost digital radio receivers. We show that the radiation can be understood in terms of the geosynchrotron effect. Our results show that it should be possible to determine the nature and composition of UHECRs with combined radio and particle detectors, and to detect the ultrahigh-energy neutrinos expected from flavour mixing.
Physical Review Letters | 2009
Olaf Scholten; S. Buitink; J. Bacelar; R. Braun; de Antonius Bruyn; H. Falcke; K. Singh; B. W. Stappers; R. Strom; R. al Yahyaoui
Particle cascades initiated by ultrahigh energy neutrinos in the lunar regolith will emit an electromagnetic pulse with a time duration of the order of nanoseconds through a process known as the Askaryan effect. It has been shown that in an observing window around 150 MHz there is a maximum chance for detecting this radiation with radio telescopes commonly used in astronomy. In 50 h of observation time with the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope array we have set a new limit on the flux of neutrinos, summed over all flavors, with energies in excess of 4x10(22) eV.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010
S. Buitink; Olaf Scholten; J. Bacelar; R. Braun; de Antonius Bruyn; H. Falcke; K. Singh; B. W. Stappers; R. Strom; R. al Yahyaoui
Context. Ultra-high energy (UHE) neutrinos and cosmic rays initiate particle cascades underneath the Moons surface. These cascades have a negative charge excess and radiate Cherenkov radio emission in a process known as the Askaryan effect. The optimal frequency window for observation of these pulses with radio telescopes on the Earth is around 150 MHz. Aims. By observing the Moon with the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope array we are able to set a new limit on the UHE neutrino flux. Methods. The PuMa II backend is used to monitor the Moon in 4 frequency bands between 113 and 175 MHz with a sampling frequency of 40 MHz. The narrowband radio interference is digitally filtered out and the dispersive effect of the Earths ionosphere is compensated for. A trigger system is implemented to search for short pulses. By inserting simulated pulses in the raw data, the detection efficiency for pulses of various strength is calculated. Results. With 47.6 hours of observation time, we are able to set a limit on the UHE neutrino flux. This new limit is an order of magnitude lower than existing limits. In the near future, the digital radio array LOFAR will be used to achieve an even lower limit.
Physical Review D | 2010
ter S. Veen; S. Buitink; H. Falcke; C.W. James; M. Mevius; Olaf Scholten; K. Singh; B. W. Stappers; K. D. de Vries
A particle cascade (shower) in a dielectric, for example, as initiated by an ultra-high-energy cosmic ray, will have an excess of electrons which will emit coherent Cerenkov radiation, known as the Askaryan effect. In this work we study the case in which such a particle shower occurs in a medium just below its surface. We show, for the first time, that the radiation transmitted through the surface is independent of the depth of the shower below the surface when observed from far away, apart from trivial absorption effects. As a direct application we use the recent results of the NuMoon project, where a limit on the neutrino flux for energies above 10{sup 22} eV was set using the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope by measuring pulsed radio emission from the Moon, to set a limit on the flux of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays.
Astroparticle Physics | 2010
S. Buitink; T. Huege; H. Falcke; J. Kuijpers
We study the effect of atmospheric electric fields on the radio pulse emitted by cos- mic ray air showers. Under fair weather conditions the dominant part of the radio emission is driven by the geomagnetic field. When the shower charges are accelerated and deflected in an electric field additional radiation is emitted. We simulate this effect with the Monte Carlo code REAS2, using CORSIKA-simulated showers as input. In both codes a routine has been implemented that treats the effect of the electric field on the shower particles. We find that the radio pulse is significantly altered in background fields of the order of ~100 V/cm and higher. Practically, this means that air showers passing through thunderstorms emit radio pulses that are not a reliable measure for the shower energy. Under other weather circumstances significant electric field effects are expected to occur rarely, but nimbostratus clouds can harbor fields that are large enough. In general, the contribution of the electric field to the radio pulse has polarization properties that are different from the geomagnetic pulse. In order to filter out radio pulses that have been affected by electric field effects, radio air shower experiments should keep weatherinformation and perform full polarizationmorexa0» measurements of the radio signal.«xa0less
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2015
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.
arXiv: Astrophysics | 2007
A. Haungs; W.D. Apel; T. Asch; F. Badea; L. Bähren; K. Bekk; A. Bercuci; M. Bertaina; Peter L. Biermann; J. Blümer; H. Bozdog; I.M. Brancus; M. Brüggemann; P. Buchholz; S. Buitink; H. R. Butcher; A. Chiavassa; F. Cossavella; K. Daumiller; F. Di Pierro; P. Doll; R. Engel; H. Falcke; H. Gemmeke; P. L. Ghia; R. Glasstetter; C. Grupen; A. Hakenjos; D. Heck; J.R. Hörandel
LOPES is set up at the location of the KASCADE-Grande extensive air shower experiment in Karlsruhe, Germany and aims to measure and investigate radio pulses from Extensive Air Showers. Data taken during half a year of operation of 10 LOPES antennas (LOPES-10), triggered by showers observed with KASCADE-Grande have been analyzed. We report about results of correlations found of the measured radio signals by LOPES-10 with shower parameters. ARENA 2006 - Acoustic and Radio EeV Neutrino detection Activities
Physical Review Letters | 2013
M. G. Aartsen; R. Abbasi; Y. Abdou; M. Ackermann; J. Adams; J. A. Aguilar; M. Ahlers; D. Altmann; J. Auffenberg; X. Bai; M. D. Baker; S. W. Barwick; V. Baum; R. Bay; K. Beattie; J. J. Beatty; S. Bechet; J. Becker Tjus; K. Becker; M. Bell; M. L. Benabderrahmane; S. BenZvi; J. Berdermann; P. Berghaus; D. Berley; E. Bernardini; A. Bernhard; D. Bertrand; D. Besson; D. Bindig
We report the first measurement of the atmospheric electron neutrino flux in the energy range between approximately 80xa0GeV and 6xa0TeV, using data recorded during the first year of operation of IceCubes DeepCore low-energy extension. Techniques to identify neutrinos interacting within the DeepCore volume and veto muons originating outside the detector are demonstrated. A sample of 1029 events is observed in 281 days of data, of which 496±66(stat)±88(syst) are estimated to be cascade events, including both electron neutrino and neutral current events. The rest of the sample includes residual backgrounds due to atmospheric muons and charged current interactions of atmospheric muon neutrinos. The flux of the atmospheric electron neutrinos is consistent with models of atmospheric neutrinos in this energy range. This constitutes the first observation of electron neutrinos and neutral current interactions in a very large volume neutrino telescope optimized for the TeV energy range.
International Journal of Modern Physics A | 2006
S. Nehls; W.D. Apel; F. Badea; L. Bähren; K. Bekk; A. Bercuci; M. Bertaina; Peter L. Biermann; J. Blümer; H. Bozdog; I.M. Brancus; M. Brüggemann; P. Buchholz; S. Buitink; H. R. Butcher; A. Chiavassa; K. Daumiller; A. G. de Bruyn; C. M. de Vos; F. Di Pierro; P. Doll; R. Engel; H. Falcke; H. Gemmeke; P. L. Ghia; R. Glasstetter; C. Grupen; A. Hakenjos; A. Haungs; D. Heck
Radio emission in extensive air showers arises from an interaction with the geomagnetic field and is subject of theoretical studies. This radio emission has advantages for the detection of high energy cosmic rays compared to secondary particle or fluorescence measurement methods. Radio antennas like the LOPES30 antenna system are suited to investigate this emission process by detecting the radio pulses. The characteristic observable parameters like electric field strength and pulse length require a calibration which was done with a reference radio source resulting in an amplification factor representing the system behavior in the environment of the KASCADE-Grande experiment. Knowing the amplification factor and the gain of the LOPES antennas LOPES30 is calibrated absolutely for systematic analyses of the radio emission.
Proceedings of 35th International Cosmic Ray Conference — PoS(ICRC2017) | 2017
L. Rossetto; A. Bonardi; S. Buitink; A. Corstanje; H. Falcke; B. M. Hare; J.R. Hörandel; Pragati Mitra; Katharine Mulrey; A. Nelles; Alejandro Olid Gonzalez; J. P. Rachen; P. Schellart; Olaf Scholten; Sander ter Veen; Satyendra Thoudam; T. N. G. Trinh; T. Winchen
The high number density of radio antennas at the LOFAR core in Northern Netherlands allows to detect radio signals emitted by extensive air showers in the energy range 10