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The energy spectrum and primary composition of cosmic rays with energy between $3times 10^{14}$ and $3times10^{16}unit{eV}$ have been studied using the CASA-BLANCA detector. CASA measured the charged particle distribution of air showers, while BLANCA measured the lateral distribution of Cherenkov light. The data are interpreted using the predictions of the CORSIKA air shower simulation coupled with four different hadronic interaction codes. The differential flux of cosmic rays measured by BLANCA exhibits a knee in the range of 2--3 PeV with a width of approximately 0.5 decades in primary energy. The power law indices of the differential flux below and above the knee are $-2.72pm0.02$ and $ -2.95pm0.02$. We present our data both as a mean depth of shower maximum and as a mean nuclear mass. A multi-component fit using four elemental species shows the same composition trends given by the mean quantities, and also indicates that QGSJET and VENUS are the preferred hadronic interaction models. We find that an initially mixed composition turns lighter between 1 and 3 PeV, and then becomes heavier with increasing energy above 3 PeV.
The cosmic ray flux measured by the Telescope Array Low Energy Extension (TALE) exhibits three spectral features: the knee, the dip in the $10^{16}$ eV decade, and the second knee. Here the spectrum has been measured for the first time using fluoresc
A hybrid experiment consisting of emulsion chambers, burst detectors and the Tibet II air-shower array was carried out at Yangbajing (4,300 m a.s.l., 606 g/cm$^2$) in Tibet to obtain the energy spectra of primary protons and heliums. From three-yea
We report a first measurement for ultra-high energy cosmic rays of the correlation between the depth of shower maximum and the signal in the water Cherenkov stations of air-showers registered simultaneously by the fluorescence and the surface detecto
The existence of the spectral break around $sim 3 times 10^{15}$ eV in the cosmic ray spectrum (referred to as the `knee) is one of the biggest questions in cosmic ray astrophysics. At the same time, the origin of cosmic rays above the knee energies
Primary cosmic ray particles above energies of about 100 TeV are investigated by large-area ground based detector installations, observing various components of the development of extensive air-showers (EAS). By such an indirect access to the primary