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Measurement of the proton-air cross section with Telescope Array's Black Rock Mesa and Long Ridge fluorescence detectors, and surface array in hybrid mode

Title
Measurement of the proton-air cross section with Telescope Array's Black Rock Mesa and Long Ridge fluorescence detectors, and surface array in hybrid mode
Author
김항배
Keywords
RAY ENERGY-SPECTRUM; COSMIC-RAYS; SHOWER EXPERIMENTS; HADRON FLUX; SIMULATIO; SCATTERING
Issue Date
2020-09
Publisher
AMER PHYSICAL SOC
Citation
PHYSICAL REVIEW D, v. 102, no. 6, article no. 062004
Abstract
Ultrahigh energy cosmic rays provide the highest known energy source in the Universe to measure proton cross sections. Though conditions for collecting such data are less controlled than an accelerator environment, current generation cosmic ray observatories have large enough exposures to collect significant statistics for a reliable measurement for energies above what can be attained in the laboratory. Cosmic ray measurements of cross section use atmospheric calorimetry to measure depth of air shower maximum (X-max), which is related to the primary particle's energy and mass. The tail of the X-max distribution is assumed to be dominated by showers generated by protons, allowing measurement of the inelastic proton-air cross section. In this work, the proton-air inelastic cross section measurement, sigma(inel)(p-air), using data observed by Telescope Array's Black Rock Mesa and Long Ridge fluorescence detectors and surface detector array in hybrid mode is presented. sigma(inel)(p-air) is observed to be 520.1 +/- 35.8[Stat](-42.9)(+25.3)[Sys] mb at root s = 73 TeV. The total proton-proton cross section is subsequently inferred from Glauber formalism and is found to be sigma(tot)(pp) = 139.4(-21.3)(+23.4)[Stat](-25.4)(+15.7)[Sys] mb.
URI
https://journals.aps.org/prd/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevD.102.062004https://repository.hanyang.ac.kr/handle/20.500.11754/170681
ISSN
1550-7998; 1550-2368
DOI
10.1103/PhysRevD.102.062004
Appears in Collections:
COLLEGE OF NATURAL SCIENCES[S](자연과학대학) > PHYSICS(물리학과) > Articles
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