LOPES Detecting Radio Emission from Cosmic Ray Air Showers
LOPES Collaboration: A.Horneffer, et al

TL;DR
LOPES demonstrates the use of digital radio interferometry to detect cosmic ray air showers, overcoming interference issues and enabling detailed analysis of transient atmospheric radio signals.
Contribution
This paper introduces the LOPES system, a digital radio interferometer that effectively detects cosmic ray air showers using advanced interference suppression and waveform analysis.
Findings
LOPES successfully detects radio emissions from air showers.
Digital interference suppression enhances detection capabilities.
LOPES can perform astronomical measurements like solar burst imaging.
Abstract
Radio pulses emitted in the atmosphere during the air shower development of high-energy primary cosmic rays were measured during the late 1960ies in the frequency range from 2 MHz to 520 MHz. Mainly due to difficulties with radio interference these measurements ceased in the late 1970ies. LOFAR (Low Frequency Array) is a new digital radio interferometer under development. Using high bandwidth ADCs and fast data processing it will be able to filter out most of the interference. By storing the whole waveform information in digital form one can analyze transient events like air showers even after they have been recorded. To test this new technology and to demonstrate its ability to measure air showers a "LOFAR Prototype Station" (LOPES) is set up to operate in conjunction with an existing air shower array (KASCADE-Grande). The first phase consisting of 10 antennas is already running.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena
