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Despite the significant experimental effort made in the last decades, the origin of the ultra high energy cosmic rays is still unknown. The chemical composition of these energetic particles carries key astrophysical information to identify where they come from. It is well known that the muon content of the showers generated by the interaction of the cosmic rays with air molecules, is very sensitive to the primary particle type. Therefore, the measurement of the number of muons at ground level is an essential tool to infer the cosmic ray mass composition. We introduce a novel method to reconstruct the lateral distribution of muons with an array of counters buried underground like AMIGA, one of the Pierre Auger Observatory detector systems. The reconstruction builds on a previous method we recently presented by considering the detector time resolution. With the new method more events can be reconstructed than with the previous one. In addition the statistical uncertainty of the measured number of muons is reduced, allowing for a better primary mass discrimination.
Although the origin of ultra high energy cosmic rays is still unknown, significant progress has been achieved in last decades with the construction of large arrays that are currently taking data. One of the most important pieces of information comes
Despite the significant experimental effort made in the last decades, the origin of the ultra-high energy cosmic rays is still largely unknown. Key astrophysical information to identify where these energetic particles come from is provided by their c
The origin and nature of the cosmic rays is still uncertain. However, a big progress has been achieved in recent years due to the good quality data provided by current and recent cosmic-rays observatories. The cosmic ray flux decreases very fast with
Aiming to observe cosmic gamma rays in the 10 - 1000 TeV energy region, we propose a 10000 m^2 underground water-Cherenkov muon-detector (MD) array that operates in conjunction with the Tibet air-shower (AS) array. Significant improvement is expected
The primary aim of ANTARES is neutrino astronomy with upward going muons created in charged current muon neutrino interactions in the detector and its surroundings. Downward going muons are background for neutrino searches. These muons are the decay