The lunar Askaryan technique with the Square Kilometre Array
Clancy W. James, Jaime Alvarez-Muniz, Justin D. Bray, Stijn Buitink,, Rustam D. Dagkesamanskii, Ronald D. Ekers, Heino Falcke, Ken G. Gayley, Tim, Huege, Maaijke Mevius, Robert L. Mutel, Raymond J. Protheroe, Olaf Scholten,, Ralph E. Spencer, Sander ter Veen

TL;DR
This paper discusses the potential of the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) to detect ultra-high-energy cosmic rays and neutrinos via the lunar Askaryan technique, promising significant advancements over previous experiments.
Contribution
It introduces a planned SKA experiment for detecting high-energy cosmic particles using lunar observations, highlighting expected event rates and technical challenges.
Findings
Estimated event rates for cosmic ray detection with SKA
Predicted energy and directional resolution improvements
Potential for increased detection of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays with phase 2
Abstract
The lunar Askaryan technique is a method to study the highest-energy cosmic rays, and their predicted counterparts, the ultra-high-energy neutrinos. By observing the Moon with a radio telescope, and searching for the characteristic nanosecond-scale Askaryan pulses emitted when a high-energy particle interacts in the outer layers of the Moon, the visible lunar surface can be used as a detection area. Several previous experiments, at Parkes, Goldstone, Kalyazin, Westerbork, the ATCA, Lovell, LOFAR, and the VLA, have developed the necessary techniques to search for these pulses, but existing instruments have lacked the necessary sensitivity to detect the known flux of cosmic rays from such a distance. This will change with the advent of the SKA. The Square Kilometre Array (SKA) will be the world's most powerful radio telescope. To be built in southern Africa, Australia and New Zealand…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Neutrino Physics Research
