Multimuons in cosmic-ray events as seen in ALICE at the LHC
ALICE Collaboration

TL;DR
This study analyzes multimuon events from cosmic rays detected by ALICE at CERN, comparing observations with models to understand cosmic-ray composition and hadronic interactions at ultra-high energies.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of cosmic muon multiplicities with multiple hadronic interaction models in the energy range of 4×10^{15} to 6×10^{16} eV.
Findings
QGSJET-II-04 best reproduces muon multiplicity distribution assuming heavy primary composition.
SIBYLL 2.3d and EPOS-LHC underpredict muon counts by over 20% and 30%.
High muon multiplicity event rates are consistent with data for QGSJET-II-04 and SIBYLL 2.3d, but not for EPOS-LHC.
Abstract
ALICE is a large experiment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. Located 52 meters underground, its detectors are suitable to measure muons produced by cosmic-ray interactions in the atmosphere. In this paper, the studies of the cosmic muons registered by ALICE during Run 2 (2015--2018) are described. The analysis is limited to multimuon events defined as events with more than four detected muons () and in the zenith angle range . The results are compared with Monte Carlo simulations using three of the main hadronic interaction models describing the air shower development in the atmosphere: QGSJET-II-04, EPOS-LHC, and SIBYLL 2.3d. The interval of the primary cosmic-ray energy involved in the measured muon multiplicity distribution is about ~eV. In this interval none of the three models is able to…
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