TAROGE-M: Radio Antenna Array on Antarctic High Mountain for Detecting Near-Horizontal Ultra-High Energy Air Showers
TAROGE Collaboration: Shih-Hao Wang, Jiwoo Nam, Pisin Chen, Yaocheng, Chen, Taejin Choi, Young-bae Ham, Shih-Ying Hsu, Jian-Jung Huang, Ming-Huey, A. Huang, Geonhwa Jee, Jongil Jung, Jieun Kim, Chung-Yun Kuo, Hyuck-Jin Kwon,, Changsup Lee, Chung-Hei Leung, Tsung-Che Liu

TL;DR
TAROGE-M is a high-altitude Antarctic radio antenna array designed to detect ultra-high energy air showers, successfully identifying cosmic ray events and demonstrating potential for neutrino and anomalous event detection.
Contribution
First deployment of TAROGE-M station showing effective detection of cosmic rays and promising sensitivity for tau neutrinos and anomalous events in Antarctic conditions.
Findings
Detected 7 cosmic ray events with energies around 1 EeV.
Reconstructed source directions with ~0.3° accuracy.
Sensitivity comparable to ANITA for tau neutrino detection.
Abstract
TAROGE-M is a self-triggered radio antenna array atop the 2700 m high Mt. Melbourne in Antarctica, designed to detect impulsive geomagnetic emission from extensive air showers induced by ultra-high energy (UHE) particles beyond 0.1 EeV, including cosmic rays (CRs), Earth-skimming tau neutrinos, and particularly, the "ANITA anomalous events" (AAEs) from near and below the horizon, which origin remains uncertain and requires more experimental inputs for clarification. The detection concept of TAROGE-M takes advantage of a high altitude with synoptic view toward the horizon as an efficient signal collector, and the radio quietness as well as strong and near vertical geomagnetic field in Antarctica. This approach has a low energy threshold, high duty cycle, and is easy to extend for quickly enlarging statistics. Here we report experimental results from the first TAROGE-M station deployed…
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