Final results of the LOPES radio interferometer for cosmic-ray air showers
W.D. Apel, J.C. Arteaga-Vel\'azquez, L. B\"ahren, K. Bekk, M., Bertaina, P.L. Biermann, J. Bl\"umer, H. Bozdog, E. Cantoni, A. Chiavassa, K., Daumiller, V. de Souza, F. Di Pierro, P. Doll, R. Engel, H. Falcke, B. Fuchs,, H. Gemmeke, C. Grupen, A. Haungs, D. Heck, J.R. H\"orandel

TL;DR
The paper summarizes a decade of LOPES radio interferometer research on cosmic-ray air showers, highlighting achievements, new analysis methods, and insights into detector performance that inform future radio-detection experiments.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of LOPES results, introduces improved simulation-based performance studies, and discusses lessons learned for future cosmic-ray radio detection.
Findings
Successful detection of air showers using interferometric beamforming
Enhanced understanding of detector response and noise effects
Improved methods for reconstructing shower parameters
Abstract
LOPES, the LOFAR prototype station, was an antenna array for cosmic-ray air showers operating from 2003 - 2013 within the KASCADE-Grande experiment. Meanwhile, the analysis is finished and the data of air-shower events measured by LOPES are available with open access in the KASCADE Cosmic Ray Data Center (KCDC). This article intends to provide a summary of the achievements, results, and lessons learned from LOPES. By digital, interferometric beamforming the detection of air showers became possible in the radio-loud environment of the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT). As a prototype experiment, LOPES tested several antenna types, array configurations and calibration techniques, and pioneered analysis methods for the reconstruction of the most important shower parameters, i.e., the arrival direction, the energy, and mass-dependent observables such as the position of the shower…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
