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Pierre Auger Observatory

The Pierre Auger Observatory is an international cosmic ray observatory in Argentina designed to detect ultra-high-energy cosmic rays: sub-atomic particles traveling nearly at the speed of light and each with energies beyond 1018 eV. In Earth's atmosphere such particles interact with air nuclei and produce various other particles. These effect particles (called an "air shower") can be detected and measured. But since these high energy particles have an estimated arrival rate of just 1 per km2 per century, the Auger Observatory has created a detection area of 3,000 km2 (1,200 sq mi)—the size of Rhode Island, or Luxembourg—in order to record a large number of these events. It is located in the western Mendoza Province, Argentina, near the Andes.

Pierre Auger Observatory
Control building in Malargüe
Named afterPierre Victor Auger 
Location(s)Malargüe
Province of Mendoza, Argentina
Coordinates35°12′24″S 69°18′57″W / 35.20667°S 69.31583°W / -35.20667; -69.31583
OrganizationMulti-national
Observatory code I47 
Altitude1330 m–1620 m, average ~1400 m
Wavelength330–380 nm UV (Fluorescence detector), 1017–1021 eV cosmic rays (Surface detector)
Built2004–2008 (and taking data during construction)
Telescope styleHybrid (Surface + Fluorescence detectors)
WebsiteOfficial site
Location of Pierre Auger Observatory
  Related media on Commons

Construction began in 2000,[1] the observatory has been taking production-grade data since 2005 and was officially completed in 2008. The northern site was to be located in southeastern Colorado, United States and hosted by Lamar Community College. It also was to consist of water-Cherenkov detectors and fluorescence telescopes, covering the area of 10,370 km2—3.3 times larger than Auger South.

The observatory was named after the French physicist Pierre Victor Auger. The project was proposed by Jim Cronin and Alan Watson in 1992. Today, more than 500 physicists from nearly 100 institutions around the world[2] are collaborating to maintain and upgrade the site in Argentina and collect and analyse the measured data. The 15 participating countries shared the $50 million construction budget, each providing a small portion of the total cost.

Physical background edit

From outer space, ultra-high-energy cosmic rays reach Earth. These consist of single sub-atomic particles (protons or atomic nuclei), each with energy levels beyond 1018 eV. When such a single particle reaches Earth atmosphere, it has its energy dissipated by creating billions of other particles: electrons, photons and muons, all near the speed of light. These particles spread longitudinally (perpendicular to the single particle incoming route), creating a forward moving plane of particles, with higher intensities near the axis. Such an incident is called an "air shower". Passing through the atmosphere, this plane of particles creates UV light, invisible to the human eye, called the fluorescing effect, more or less in the pattern of straight lightning traces. These traces can be photographed at high speed by specialised telescopes, called Fluorescence Detectors, overlooking an area at a slight elevation. Then, when the particles reach the Earth's surface, they can be detected when they arrive in a water tank, where they cause visible blue light due to the Cherenkov effect. A sensitive photoelectric tube can catch these impacts. Such a station is called a water-Cherenkov Detector or 'tank'. The Auger Observatory has both types of detectors covering the same area, which allows for very precise measurements.

When an air shower hits multiple Cherenkov Detectors on the ground, the direction of the ray can be calculated using basic geometrics. The longitudinal axis point can be determined from the densities in each affected ground station. Depending on the time difference of impact places, the angle of the axis can be determined. Only when the axis would be vertical, all ground detectors register at the very same moment in time, and any tilting of the axis will cause a time difference between earliest and latest touchdown.[3]

Earlier observatories edit

Cosmic rays were discovered in 1912 by Victor Hess. He measured a difference in ionisation at different heights (using the Eiffel tower and a Hess-manned hot air balloon), an indication of the atmospheric thinning (so spreading) of a single ray. Influence of the Sun was ruled out by measuring during an eclipse. Many scientists researched the phenomenon, sometimes independently, and in 1937 Pierre Auger could conclude in detail that it was a single ray that interacted with air nuclei, causing an electron and photon air shower. At the same time, the third particle muon was discovered (behaving like a very heavy electron).

Overview edit

Surface detector (SD) edit

 
Surface detector (SD) station, or 'tank', of the Pierre Auger Observatory.

In 1967 University of Leeds had developed a water-Cherenkov detector (or surface station; a small water basin, 1.2 m deep; also called tank) and created a 12 km2 detection area Haverah Park using 200 such tanks. They were arranged in groups of four in a triangular (Y) ground pattern, the triangles in different sizes. The observatory worked for 20 years, and produced the main design parameters for the ground detection system at Auger Observatory. It was Alan Watson who in the later years led the research team and subsequently co-initiated Auger Observatory Collaboration.

Fluorescence detector (FD) edit

 
The Central Campus building in Malargüe.
 
Back view of a surface detector station.
 
One of four Fluorescence detector (FD) buildings.
 
SD station and AERA antenna in the foreground, one FD building and the three HEAT telescopes in the background.
 
AERA antenna with the Andes in the background

Meanwhile, from the Volcano Ranch (New Mexico, 1959–1978), the Fly's Eye (Dugway, Utah) and its successor the High Resolution Fly's Eye Cosmic Ray Detector called "HiRes" or "Fly's Eye" (University of Utah), the technique of the fluorescence detector was developed. These are optical telescopes, adjusted to picture UV light rays when looking over a surface area. It uses faceted observation (hence the fly's eye reference), to produce pixeled pictures at high speed. In 1992, James Cronin led the research and co-initiated the Auger Observation Collaboration.

Designing and building edit

The Pierre Auger Observatory is unique in that it is the first experiment that combines both ground detectors and fluorescence detectors at the same site thus allowing cross-calibration and reduction of systematic effects that may be peculiar to each technique. The Cherenkov detectors use three large photomultiplier tubes to detect the Cherenkov radiation produced by high-energy particles passing through water in the tank. The time of arrival of high-energy particles from the same shower at several tanks is used to calculate the direction of travel of the original particle. The fluorescence detectors are used to track the particle air shower's glow on cloudless moonless nights, as it descends through the atmosphere.

In 1995 at Fermilab, Chicago, the basic design was made for the Auger observatory. For half a year, many scientists produced the main requirements, and a cost estimation, for the projected Auger.[3] The observatory's area had to be reduced from 5000 km2 to 3000 km2.

When construction began, a full-scale prototype was set up first: the Engineering Array. This array consisted of the first 40 ground detectors and a single fluorescence detector. All were fully equipped. The engineering array operated for 6 months in 2001 as a prototype; it was later integrated into the main setup. It was used to make more detailed design choices (like which type of photomultiplier tube (PMT) to use, and tank water quality requirements) and to calibrate.[4]

In 2003, it became the largest ultra-high energy cosmic ray detector in the world. It is located on the vast plain of Pampa Amarilla, near the town of Malargüe in Mendoza Province, Argentina. The basic set-up consists of 1600 water Cherenkov Detectors or 'tanks', (similar to the Haverah Park experiment) distributed over 3,000 square kilometres (1,200 sq mi), along with 24 atmospheric Fluorescence Detector telescopes (FD; similar to the High Resolution Fly's Eye) overseeing the surface array.

To support the atmospheric measurements (FD measurements), supporting stations are added to the site:

  • Central Laser Facility station (CLF)
  • eXtreme Laser Facility (XLF)
  • The four fluorescence detector stations also operate: Lidar, infrared cloud detection (IR camera), a weather station, aerosol phase function monitors (APF; 2 out of four), optical telescopes HAM (one) and FRAM (one)
  • Balloon launch station (BLS): until December 2010, within hours after a notable shower a meteorologic balloon was launched to record atmospheric data up to 23 km height.[5]

Locations edit

Station Type Location
Ground station array 1600 surface detection stations (SD)
(centerpoint of area)
35°12′24″S 69°18′57″W / 35.20675°S 69.31597°W / -35.20675; -69.31597 (groundstations area (center point of 1600 surface detectors))
Los Leones 6 fluorescence detectors 35°29′45″S 69°26′59″W / 35.49584°S 69.44979°W / -35.49584; -69.44979 (Los Leones (6 FD))
Morados 6 fluorescence detectors 35°16′52″S 69°00′13″W / 35.28108°S 69.00349°W / -35.28108; -69.00349 (Morados (6 FD))
Loma Amarilla 6 fluorescence detectors 34°56′09″S 69°12′39″W / 34.93597°S 69.21084°W / -34.93597; -69.21084 (Loma Amarilla (6 FD))
Coihueco 6 fluorescence detectors 35°06′51″S 69°35′59″W / 35.11409°S 69.59975°W / -35.11409; -69.59975 (Coihueco (6 FD))
Observatory campus central office 35°28′51″S 69°34′14″W / 35.48084°S 69.57052°W / -35.48084; -69.57052 (Observatory campus)
Malargüe city 35°28′06″S 69°35′05″W / 35.46844°S 69.58478°W / -35.46844; -69.58478 (Malargüe)

Results edit

The observatory has been taking good-quality data since 2005 and was officially completed in 2008.

In November 2007, the Auger Project team announced some preliminary results. These showed that the directions of origin of the 27 highest-energy events were correlated with the locations of active galactic nuclei (AGNs).[6] A subsequent test with a much larger data sample revealed however that the large degree of initially observed correlation was most probably due to a statistical fluctuation.[7]

In 2017, data from 12 years of observations enabled the discovery of a significant anisotropy of the arrival direction of cosmic rays at energies above 8×1018 eV. This supports that extragalactic sources (i.e. outside of our galaxy) for the origin of these extremely high energy cosmic rays (see Ultra-high-energy cosmic ray).[8] However, it is not yet known what type of galaxies are responsible for the acceleration of these ultra-high-energy cosmic rays. This question remains under investigation with the AugerPrime upgrade of the Pierre Auger Observatory.

The Pierre Auger Collaboration has made available (for outreach purposes) 1 percent of the ground array events below 50 EeV (1018 eV). Higher energy events require more physical analysis and are not published this way. The data can be explored at the web site.

As of October 2021, a portion of the data (10 percent) presented at the 2019 International Cosmic Ray Conference in Madison, USA, is publicly available.[9]

Developments edit

Research and development was done on new detection techniques and ([when?] to[when?])[citation needed] on possible upgrades to the observatory, including:

  • three additional fluorescence detecting telescopes, capable of covering higher altitudes (HEAT—High Elevation Auger Telescopes)
  • two higher-density nested arrays of surface detectors combined with underground muon counters (AMIGA—Auger Muons and Infill for the Ground Array)
  • a prototype radiotelescope array (AERA—Auger Engineering Radio Array) for detecting radioemission from the shower cascade, in the frequency range 30–80 MHz
  • R&D on detecting microwave emission from shower electrons (frequencies around 4 GHz)

AugerPrime Upgrade edit

AugerPrime is a major upgrade of the Pierre Auger Observatory under construction since 2019:

  • the surface detectors will be enhanced by scintillation detectors and radio antennas
  • the duty cycle of the FD measurements will be extended for the highest energies to include nights with moon light
  • AMIGA will be completed: in a 20 km2 densely spaced area of the surface detector, each surface detector will be equipped with underground muon detectors

All these enhancements aim at increasing the measurement accuracy of the Pierre Auger Observatory, in particular for the mass of the primary cosmic-ray particles.

In popular culture edit

Argentina issued 100,000 postage stamps honouring the observatory on 14 July 2007. The stamp shows a surface detector tank in the foreground, a building of fluorescence detectors in the background, and the expression "1020 eV" in large lettering.[10][11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-11-12. Retrieved 2007-11-09.
  2. ^ The Pierre Auger Collaboration: collaborators by institution
  3. ^ a b The Auger Collaboration (1995-10-31). "The Pierre Auger Project Design Report" (PDF). Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. Retrieved 2013-06-13.
  4. ^ Abraham, J.; et al. (2004). (PDF). Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment. 523 (1–2): 50–95. Bibcode:2004NIMPA.523...50A. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.136.9392. doi:10.1016/j.nima.2003.12.012. S2CID 120233167. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-12-05. Retrieved 2013-06-13.
  5. ^ Louedec, Karim (2011). "Atmospheric Monitoring at the Pierre Auger Observatory – Status and Update" (PDF). International Cosmic Ray Conference. 2: 63. Bibcode:2011ICRC....2...63L. doi:10.7529/ICRC2011/V02/0568. Retrieved 2013-06-12.
  6. ^ Science Magazine; 9 November 2007; The Pierre Auger Collaboration et al., pp. 938 - 943
  7. ^ Astrophys.J. 804 (2015) no.1, 15
  8. ^ "Study confirms cosmic rays have extragalactic origins". EurekAlert!. Retrieved 2017-09-22.
  9. ^ "Auger Open Data". Auger Collaboration. Retrieved 2 December 2022.
  10. ^ Analía Giménez (21 July 2007). "El laboratorio de rayos viaja al mundo en una estampilla" (in Spanish). Diario UNO de MENDOZA. Retrieved 2011-06-16.
  11. ^ (in Spanish). Foro de Filatelia Argentina. 29 July 2007. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 2011-06-16.

Further reading edit

  • Correlation of the Highest-Energy Cosmic Rays with Nearby Extragalactic Objects: Science 2007 (subscription required). Arxiv preprint (free but not official).
  • Symmetry February 2005

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Southern site website (Spanish and English)
  • Observatory's Flickr website
  • – visuals for the PAO: includes movies, animated 3d models of cosmic ray showers over the Malargüe site, and stereo photographs.
  • Astroparticle.org – European astroparticle physics portal
  • Detecting Cosmic Rays: The Auger Observatory and Frontier Science – Interview with Angela Olinto (video)

pierre, auger, observatory, international, cosmic, observatory, argentina, designed, detect, ultra, high, energy, cosmic, rays, atomic, particles, traveling, nearly, speed, light, each, with, energies, beyond, 1018, earth, atmosphere, such, particles, interact. The Pierre Auger Observatory is an international cosmic ray observatory in Argentina designed to detect ultra high energy cosmic rays sub atomic particles traveling nearly at the speed of light and each with energies beyond 1018 eV In Earth s atmosphere such particles interact with air nuclei and produce various other particles These effect particles called an air shower can be detected and measured But since these high energy particles have an estimated arrival rate of just 1 per km2 per century the Auger Observatory has created a detection area of 3 000 km2 1 200 sq mi the size of Rhode Island or Luxembourg in order to record a large number of these events It is located in the western Mendoza Province Argentina near the Andes Pierre Auger ObservatoryControl building in MalargueNamed afterPierre Victor Auger Location s MalargueProvince of Mendoza ArgentinaCoordinates35 12 24 S 69 18 57 W 35 20667 S 69 31583 W 35 20667 69 31583OrganizationMulti nationalObservatory codeI47 Altitude1330 m 1620 m average 1400 mWavelength330 380 nm UV Fluorescence detector 1017 1021 eV cosmic rays Surface detector Built2004 2008 and taking data during construction Telescope styleHybrid Surface Fluorescence detectors WebsiteOfficial siteLocation of Pierre Auger Observatory Related media on Commons edit on Wikidata Construction began in 2000 1 the observatory has been taking production grade data since 2005 and was officially completed in 2008 The northern site was to be located in southeastern Colorado United States and hosted by Lamar Community College It also was to consist of water Cherenkov detectors and fluorescence telescopes covering the area of 10 370 km2 3 3 times larger than Auger South The observatory was named after the French physicist Pierre Victor Auger The project was proposed by Jim Cronin and Alan Watson in 1992 Today more than 500 physicists from nearly 100 institutions around the world 2 are collaborating to maintain and upgrade the site in Argentina and collect and analyse the measured data The 15 participating countries shared the 50 million construction budget each providing a small portion of the total cost Contents 1 Physical background 1 1 Earlier observatories 2 Overview 2 1 Surface detector SD 2 2 Fluorescence detector FD 2 3 Designing and building 2 4 Locations 3 Results 4 Developments 4 1 AugerPrime Upgrade 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksPhysical background editFrom outer space ultra high energy cosmic rays reach Earth These consist of single sub atomic particles protons or atomic nuclei each with energy levels beyond 1018 eV When such a single particle reaches Earth atmosphere it has its energy dissipated by creating billions of other particles electrons photons and muons all near the speed of light These particles spread longitudinally perpendicular to the single particle incoming route creating a forward moving plane of particles with higher intensities near the axis Such an incident is called an air shower Passing through the atmosphere this plane of particles creates UV light invisible to the human eye called the fluorescing effect more or less in the pattern of straight lightning traces These traces can be photographed at high speed by specialised telescopes called Fluorescence Detectors overlooking an area at a slight elevation Then when the particles reach the Earth s surface they can be detected when they arrive in a water tank where they cause visible blue light due to the Cherenkov effect A sensitive photoelectric tube can catch these impacts Such a station is called a water Cherenkov Detector or tank The Auger Observatory has both types of detectors covering the same area which allows for very precise measurements When an air shower hits multiple Cherenkov Detectors on the ground the direction of the ray can be calculated using basic geometrics The longitudinal axis point can be determined from the densities in each affected ground station Depending on the time difference of impact places the angle of the axis can be determined Only when the axis would be vertical all ground detectors register at the very same moment in time and any tilting of the axis will cause a time difference between earliest and latest touchdown 3 Earlier observatories edit Main article Cosmic ray observatory Cosmic rays were discovered in 1912 by Victor Hess He measured a difference in ionisation at different heights using the Eiffel tower and a Hess manned hot air balloon an indication of the atmospheric thinning so spreading of a single ray Influence of the Sun was ruled out by measuring during an eclipse Many scientists researched the phenomenon sometimes independently and in 1937 Pierre Auger could conclude in detail that it was a single ray that interacted with air nuclei causing an electron and photon air shower At the same time the third particle muon was discovered behaving like a very heavy electron Overview editSurface detector SD edit nbsp Surface detector SD station or tank of the Pierre Auger Observatory In 1967 University of Leeds had developed a water Cherenkov detector or surface station a small water basin 1 2 m deep also called tank and created a 12 km2 detection area Haverah Park using 200 such tanks They were arranged in groups of four in a triangular Y ground pattern the triangles in different sizes The observatory worked for 20 years and produced the main design parameters for the ground detection system at Auger Observatory It was Alan Watson who in the later years led the research team and subsequently co initiated Auger Observatory Collaboration Fluorescence detector FD edit nbsp The Central Campus building in Malargue nbsp Back view of a surface detector station nbsp One of four Fluorescence detector FD buildings nbsp SD station and AERA antenna in the foreground one FD building and the three HEAT telescopes in the background nbsp AERA antenna with the Andes in the backgroundMeanwhile from the Volcano Ranch New Mexico 1959 1978 the Fly s Eye Dugway Utah and its successor the High Resolution Fly s Eye Cosmic Ray Detector called HiRes or Fly s Eye University of Utah the technique of the fluorescence detector was developed These are optical telescopes adjusted to picture UV light rays when looking over a surface area It uses faceted observation hence the fly s eye reference to produce pixeled pictures at high speed In 1992 James Cronin led the research and co initiated the Auger Observation Collaboration Designing and building edit The Pierre Auger Observatory is unique in that it is the first experiment that combines both ground detectors and fluorescence detectors at the same site thus allowing cross calibration and reduction of systematic effects that may be peculiar to each technique The Cherenkov detectors use three large photomultiplier tubes to detect the Cherenkov radiation produced by high energy particles passing through water in the tank The time of arrival of high energy particles from the same shower at several tanks is used to calculate the direction of travel of the original particle The fluorescence detectors are used to track the particle air shower s glow on cloudless moonless nights as it descends through the atmosphere In 1995 at Fermilab Chicago the basic design was made for the Auger observatory For half a year many scientists produced the main requirements and a cost estimation for the projected Auger 3 The observatory s area had to be reduced from 5000 km2 to 3000 km2 When construction began a full scale prototype was set up first the Engineering Array This array consisted of the first 40 ground detectors and a single fluorescence detector All were fully equipped The engineering array operated for 6 months in 2001 as a prototype it was later integrated into the main setup It was used to make more detailed design choices like which type of photomultiplier tube PMT to use and tank water quality requirements and to calibrate 4 In 2003 it became the largest ultra high energy cosmic ray detector in the world It is located on the vast plain of Pampa Amarilla near the town of Malargue in Mendoza Province Argentina The basic set up consists of 1600 water Cherenkov Detectors or tanks similar to the Haverah Park experiment distributed over 3 000 square kilometres 1 200 sq mi along with 24 atmospheric Fluorescence Detector telescopes FD similar to the High Resolution Fly s Eye overseeing the surface array To support the atmospheric measurements FD measurements supporting stations are added to the site Central Laser Facility station CLF eXtreme Laser Facility XLF The four fluorescence detector stations also operate Lidar infrared cloud detection IR camera a weather station aerosol phase function monitors APF 2 out of four optical telescopes HAM one and FRAM one Balloon launch station BLS until December 2010 within hours after a notable shower a meteorologic balloon was launched to record atmospheric data up to 23 km height 5 Locations edit Station Type LocationGround station array 1600 surface detection stations SD centerpoint of area 35 12 24 S 69 18 57 W 35 20675 S 69 31597 W 35 20675 69 31597 groundstations area center point of 1600 surface detectors Los Leones 6 fluorescence detectors 35 29 45 S 69 26 59 W 35 49584 S 69 44979 W 35 49584 69 44979 Los Leones 6 FD Morados 6 fluorescence detectors 35 16 52 S 69 00 13 W 35 28108 S 69 00349 W 35 28108 69 00349 Morados 6 FD Loma Amarilla 6 fluorescence detectors 34 56 09 S 69 12 39 W 34 93597 S 69 21084 W 34 93597 69 21084 Loma Amarilla 6 FD Coihueco 6 fluorescence detectors 35 06 51 S 69 35 59 W 35 11409 S 69 59975 W 35 11409 69 59975 Coihueco 6 FD Observatory campus central office 35 28 51 S 69 34 14 W 35 48084 S 69 57052 W 35 48084 69 57052 Observatory campus Malargue city 35 28 06 S 69 35 05 W 35 46844 S 69 58478 W 35 46844 69 58478 Malargue Map of this section s coordinates or show using OpenStreetMapDownload coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Results editThe observatory has been taking good quality data since 2005 and was officially completed in 2008 In November 2007 the Auger Project team announced some preliminary results These showed that the directions of origin of the 27 highest energy events were correlated with the locations of active galactic nuclei AGNs 6 A subsequent test with a much larger data sample revealed however that the large degree of initially observed correlation was most probably due to a statistical fluctuation 7 In 2017 data from 12 years of observations enabled the discovery of a significant anisotropy of the arrival direction of cosmic rays at energies above 8 1018 eV This supports that extragalactic sources i e outside of our galaxy for the origin of these extremely high energy cosmic rays see Ultra high energy cosmic ray 8 However it is not yet known what type of galaxies are responsible for the acceleration of these ultra high energy cosmic rays This question remains under investigation with the AugerPrime upgrade of the Pierre Auger Observatory The Pierre Auger Collaboration has made available for outreach purposes 1 percent of the ground array events below 50 EeV 1018 eV Higher energy events require more physical analysis and are not published this way The data can be explored at the Public Event Display web site As of October 2021 a portion of the data 10 percent presented at the 2019 International Cosmic Ray Conference in Madison USA is publicly available 9 Developments editResearch and development was done on new detection techniques and when to when citation needed on possible upgrades to the observatory including three additional fluorescence detecting telescopes capable of covering higher altitudes HEAT High Elevation Auger Telescopes two higher density nested arrays of surface detectors combined with underground muon counters AMIGA Auger Muons and Infill for the Ground Array a prototype radiotelescope array AERA Auger Engineering Radio Array for detecting radioemission from the shower cascade in the frequency range 30 80 MHz R amp D on detecting microwave emission from shower electrons frequencies around 4 GHz AugerPrime Upgrade edit AugerPrime is a major upgrade of the Pierre Auger Observatory under construction since 2019 the surface detectors will be enhanced by scintillation detectors and radio antennas the duty cycle of the FD measurements will be extended for the highest energies to include nights with moon light AMIGA will be completed in a 20 km2 densely spaced area of the surface detector each surface detector will be equipped with underground muon detectorsAll these enhancements aim at increasing the measurement accuracy of the Pierre Auger Observatory in particular for the mass of the primary cosmic ray particles In popular culture editArgentina issued 100 000 postage stamps honouring the observatory on 14 July 2007 The stamp shows a surface detector tank in the foreground a building of fluorescence detectors in the background and the expression 1020 eV in large lettering 10 11 See also editList of astronomical observatories List of astronomical societies Lists of telescopesReferences edit News 20 12 13 Archived from the original on 2007 11 12 Retrieved 2007 11 09 The Pierre Auger Collaboration collaborators by institution a b The Auger Collaboration 1995 10 31 The Pierre Auger Project Design Report PDF Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory Retrieved 2013 06 13 Abraham J et al 2004 Properties and performance of the prototype instrument for the Pierre Auger Observatory PDF Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A Accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment 523 1 2 50 95 Bibcode 2004NIMPA 523 50A CiteSeerX 10 1 1 136 9392 doi 10 1016 j nima 2003 12 012 S2CID 120233167 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 12 05 Retrieved 2013 06 13 Louedec Karim 2011 Atmospheric Monitoring at the Pierre Auger Observatory Status and Update PDF International Cosmic Ray Conference 2 63 Bibcode 2011ICRC 2 63L doi 10 7529 ICRC2011 V02 0568 Retrieved 2013 06 12 Science Magazine 9 November 2007 The Pierre Auger Collaboration et al pp 938 943 Astrophys J 804 2015 no 1 15 Study confirms cosmic rays have extragalactic origins EurekAlert Retrieved 2017 09 22 Auger Open Data Auger Collaboration Retrieved 2 December 2022 Analia Gimenez 21 July 2007 El laboratorio de rayos viaja al mundo en una estampilla in Spanish Diario UNO de MENDOZA Retrieved 2011 06 16 Observatorio Pierre Auger in Spanish Foro de Filatelia Argentina 29 July 2007 Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 2011 06 16 Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pierre Auger Observatory Correlation of the Highest Energy Cosmic Rays with Nearby Extragalactic Objects Science 2007 subscription required Arxiv preprint free but not official Let It Rain Symmetry February 2005External links editOfficial website Public Event Display Southern site website Spanish and English Observatory s Flickr website COSMUS visuals for the PAO includes movies animated 3d models of cosmic ray showers over the Malargue site and stereo photographs ASPERA European astroparticle physics network Astroparticle org European astroparticle physics portal Detecting Cosmic Rays The Auger Observatory and Frontier Science Interview with Angela Olinto video Portals nbsp Argentina nbsp Astronomy nbsp Stars nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Outer space nbsp Solar System nbsp Education nbsp Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pierre Auger Observatory amp oldid 1136903118, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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