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STELLAR CHEMISTRY
University of Utah Awarded Cosmic Rays Study Contract
by Staff Writers
Salt Lake City UT (SPX) Sep 28, 2012

In 1912, Victor Hess discovered cosmic rays, which since have been determined to be subatomic particles and radiation of extra-terrestrial origin.

The University of Utah reports that the W.M. Keck Foundation awarded $1 million to university researchers to study high-energy cosmic rays in Utah's western deserts that are hurtling their way toward Earth. These rays - 10 trillion times more energetic than particles emitted in a nuclear explosion - originate from violent cosmic events deep within the universe.

The Keck grant will assist a team of researchers in developing a new tool for understanding how the universe evolved.

Employing a technique known as "Bistatic Radar," researchers will attempt to use analog television transmitters and high-speed digital receivers to observe the range, direction and strength of high-energy particles in order to track these rays back to their point of origin.

Bistatic Radar will be much less expensive than traditional cosmic ray detection techniques, which employ surface radiation detectors covering thousands of square kilometers of the Earth's surface and cost tens of millions of dollars.

The new facility created under the auspices of this grant will be known as The W.M. Keck Radar Observatory. The Keck Radar Observatory will be located in Millard County Utah, where it will initially be co-located with Utah's Telescope Array, currently the largest "conventional" cosmic ray observatory in the Northern Hemisphere.

This will enable comparison of the Keck Observatory's findings with those of a conventional observatory on an event-by-event basis and allow for the evaluation of radar scattering models.

Utah's western deserts offer low levels of light pollution and atmospheric aerosols, making Utah an ideal location for detecting and studying cosmic rays. In addition, Utah's deserts are highly "radio-quiet" with low levels of human-generated high-frequency interference, which makes it uniquely suitable for tests of the radar technique.

"We are at the frontier in our understanding of the origin of the universe's most energetic particles," said John Belz, radar project director and research associate professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Utah.

"These particles are hundreds of thousands of times more energetic than particles emitted from supernova explosions. Our main goal is to understand the origins of these rare cosmic rays, in order to gain a better understanding of some of the most violent processes shaping the universe."

In 1912, Victor Hess discovered cosmic rays, which since have been determined to be subatomic particles and radiation of extra-terrestrial origin. In 1991, the University of Utah's Fly's Eye Cosmic Ray Detector in Utah's Dugway Proving Ground recorded the highest energy elementary particle ever observed.

This particle was believed to be a proton traveling close to the speed of light and initiated a search for cosmic origins that continues to this day. High-energy cosmic particles are rare. A square mile of the Earth's surface might be impacted by one of these particles roughly once a century.

Other University of Utah researchers taking part in the study include: Pierre Sokolsky, professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy and Dean of the College of Science; Behrouz Farhang-Boroujeny, professor and associate chair of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering; and Gordon Thomson, the Jack W. Keuffel chair in experimental astrophysics at the Department of Physics and Astronomy. Investigators from other institutions include David Besson, professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Kansas; and Helio Takai, physicist at the Brookhaven National Laboratory.

Related Links
University of Utah
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It




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STELLAR CHEMISTRY
HiSCORE project: Most extreme Universe near Lake Baikal
Moscow (Voice of Russia) Sep 10, 2012
An advanced new facility that specializes in catching elusive cosmic rays was initiated within the framework of a joint Russian-German-Italian project. A Tunca-Hi-SCORE observatory will be built near Lake Baikal in Tunka valley (Russia). The project aims to study gamma ray components of high-energy space radiation, thus revealing the secrets of the most energetic events in the Universe. Tu ... read more


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