Determination of the absolute energy scale of extensive air showers via radio emission: systematic uncertainty of underlying first-principle calculations
Marvin Gottowik, Christian Glaser, Tim Huege, Julian Rautenberg

TL;DR
This paper assesses the systematic uncertainties in determining the absolute energy scale of cosmic rays via radio emission, using first-principle calculations and comparing simulation codes to ensure accuracy.
Contribution
It quantifies the uncertainty in radio-based energy measurements of air showers and verifies the consistency of simulation codes for precise cosmic-ray energy calibration.
Findings
Radiation energy prediction differences are 5.2% between codes.
Uncertainty in cosmic-ray energy scale is 2.6%.
Radio detection provides a reliable independent energy calibration method.
Abstract
Recently, the energy determination of extensive air showers using radio emission has been shown to be both precise and accurate. In particular, radio detection offers the opportunity for an independent measurement of the absolute energy scale of cosmic rays, since the radiation energy (the energy radiated in the form of radio signals) can be predicted using first-principle calculations involving no free parameters, and the measurement of radio waves is not subject to any significant absorption or scattering in the atmosphere. To quantify the uncertainty associated with such an approach, we collate the various contributions to the uncertainty, and we verify the consistency of radiation-energy calculations from microscopic simulation codes by comparing Monte Carlo simulations made with the two codes CoREAS and ZHAireS. We compare a large set of simulations with different primary energies…
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