The current status of orbital experiments for UHECR studies
M.I. Panasyuk, M. Casolino, G.K. Garipov, T. Ebisuzaki, P. Gorodetzky,, B.A. Khrenov, P.A. Klimov, V.S. Morozenko, N. Sakaki, O.A. Saprykin, S.A., Sharakin, Y. Takizawa, L.G. Tkachev, I.V. Yashin, M.Yu. Zotov

TL;DR
This paper reviews the development and current status of three orbital detectors—TUS, KLYPVE, and JEM-EUSO—for studying ultra-high-energy cosmic rays, highlighting their designs, capabilities, and potential scientific contributions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive comparison of the three orbital detectors, detailing their optical systems, field of view, and technological advancements for cosmic ray observation.
Findings
TUS is in final preflight testing on the Lomonosov satellite.
KLYPVE aims to exceed ground-based experiment exposure with a larger mirror.
JEM-EUSO features a wide field of view with advanced optics and a large photomultiplier array.
Abstract
Two types of orbital detectors of extreme energy cosmic rays are being developed nowadays: (i) TUS and KLYPVE with reflecting optical systems (mirrors) and (ii) JEM-EUSO with high-transmittance Fresnel lenses. They will cover much larger areas than existing ground-based arrays and almost uniformly monitor the celestial sphere. The TUS detector is the pioneering mission developed in SINP MSU in cooperation with several Russian and foreign institutions. It has relatively small field of view (+/-4.5 deg), which corresponds to a ground area of 6.4x10^3 sq.km. The telescope consists of a Fresnel-type mirror-concentrator (~2 sq.m) and a photo receiver (a matrix of 16x16 photomultiplier tubes). It is to be deployed on the Lomonosov satellite, and is currently at the final stage of preflight tests. Recently, SINP MSU began the KLYPVE project to be installed on board of the Russian segment of…
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