THE ARGO-YBJ EXPERIMENT PROGRESSES AND FUTURE EXTENSION
- Autori: B. Bartoli; BERNARDINI, Paolo; X. J. Bi; C. Bleve; I. Bolognino; P. Branchini; A. Budano; A. K. Calabrese Melcarne; P. Camarri; Z. Cao; A. Cappa; R. Cardarelli; S. Catalanotti; C. Cattaneo; P. Celio; S. Z. Chen; T. L. Chen; Y. Chen; P. Creti; S. W. Cui; B. Z. Dai; G. D’Ali´ Staiti; Danzengluobu; M. Dattoli; DE MITRI, Ivan; B. D’Ettorre Piazzoli; T. Di Girolamo; X. H. Ding; G. Di Sciascio; C. F. Feng; Zhaoyang Feng; Zhenyong Feng; F. Galeazzi; P. Galeotti; E. Giroletti; Q. B. Gou; Y. Q. Guo; H. H. He; Haibing Huo; Hongbo Hue; Q. Huang; M. Iacovacci; R. Iuppa; I. James; H. Y. Jia; Labaciren; H. J. Li; J. Y. Li; X. X. Li; G. Liguori; C. Liu; C. Q. Liu; J. Liu; M. Y. Liu; H. Lu; X. H. Ma; MANCARELLA, Giovanni; S. M. Mari; MARSELLA, GIOVANNI; MARTELLO, Daniele; S. Mastroianni; P. Montini; C. C. Ning; A. Pagliaro; PANAREO, Marco; B. Panico; PERRONE, Lorenzo; P. Pistilli; X. B. Qu; E. Rossi; F. Ruggieri; P. Salvini; R. Santonico; P. R. Shen; X. D. Sheng; F. Shi; C. Stanescu; A. Surdo; Y. H. Tan; P. Vallania; S. Vernetto; C. Vigorito; B. Wang; H. Wang; C. Y. Wu; H. R. Wu; B. Xu; L. Xue; Y. X. Yan; Q. Y. Yang; X. C. Yang; Z. G. Yao; A. F. Yuan; M. Zha; H. M. Zhang; JilongZhang, JianliZhang; L. Zhang; P. Zhang; X. Y. Zhang; Y. Zhang; Zhaxiciren, Zhaxisangzhu; X. X. Zhou; F. R. Zhu; Q. Q. Zhu; G. Zizzi
- Anno di pubblicazione: 2011
- Tipologia: Articolo in rivista
- Parole Chiave: Gamma ray source; cosmic ray origin; detector array
- OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/466597
Abstract
Gamma ray source detection above 30TeV is an encouraging approach for finding galactic cosmic ray origins. All sky survey for gamma ray sources using wide field of view detector is essential for population accumulation for various types of sources above 100 GeV. To target the goals, the ARGO-YBJ experiment has been established. Significant progresses have been made in the experiment. A large air shower detector array in an area of 1 km2 is proposed to boost the sensitivity. Hybrid detections with multitechniques will allow a good discrimination between different types of primary particles, including photons and protons, thus enable an energy spectrum measurement for individual species. Fluorescence light detector array will extend the spectrum measurement to 100 PeV and higher where the second knee is located. An energy scale determined by balloon experiments at 10 TeV will be propagated to ultra high energy cosmic ray experiments.