The Giant Radio Array for Neutrino Detection
Jo\~ao R. T. de Mello Neto

TL;DR
GRAND is a large-scale radio array project aiming to detect ultra-high-energy neutrinos and cosmic rays, with prototype arrays operational and plans for extensive deployment by 2028 to explore the most energetic astrophysical phenomena.
Contribution
This paper presents the design, current status, and future plans of the GRAND project, including prototype arrays and the goal of deploying two GRAND10k arrays worldwide.
Findings
Prototype arrays are operational and in commissioning stages.
Simulation results support the feasibility of radio detection of UHE air showers.
Deployment of final detector units is planned for 2028.
Abstract
Ultra-high-energy cosmic neutrinos (UHE), with energies above 100 PeV, are unparalleled probes of the most energetic astrophysical sources and weak interactions at energies beyond the reach of accelerators. GRAND is an envisioned observatory of UHE particles - neutrinos, cosmic rays, and gamma rays - consisting of 200,000 radio antennas deployed in sub-arrays at different locations worldwide. GRAND aims to detect the radio emission from air showers induced by UHE particle interactions in the atmosphere and underground. For neutrinos, it aims to reach a flux sensitivity of GeV cm s sr, with a sub-degree angular resolution, which would allow it to test the smallest predicted diffuse fluxes of UHE neutrinos and to discover point sources. The GRAND Collaboration operates three prototype detector arrays simultaneously: GRAND@Nan\c{c}ay in France,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Neutrino Physics Research
