• Title of article

    The ExaVolt Antenna: A large-aperture, balloon-embedded antenna for ultra-high energy particle detection

  • Author/Authors

    Gorham، نويسنده , , P.W. and Baginski، نويسنده , , F.E. and Allison، نويسنده , , P. and Liewer، نويسنده , , K.M. and Miki، نويسنده , , C. and Hill، نويسنده , , B. and Varner، نويسنده , , G.S.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
  • Pages
    15
  • From page
    242
  • To page
    256
  • Abstract
    We describe the scientific motivation, experimental basis, design methodology, and simulated performance of the ExaVolt Antenna (EVA) mission, and planned ultra-high energy (UHE) particle observatory under development for NASA’s suborbital super-pressure balloon program in Antarctica. EVA will improve over ANITA’s integrated totals – the current state-of-the-art in UHE suborbital payloads – by 1–2 orders of magnitude in a single flight. The design is based on a novel application of toroidal reflector optics which utilizes a super-pressure balloon surface, along with a feed-array mounted on an inner membrane, to create an ultra-large radio antenna system with a synoptic view of the Antarctic ice sheet below it. Radio impulses arise via the Askaryan effect when UHE neutrinos interact within the ice, or via geosynchrotron emission when UHE cosmic rays interact in the atmosphere above the continent. EVA’s instantaneous antenna aperture is estimated to be several hundred m2 for detection of these events within a 150–600 MHz band. For standard cosmogenic UHE neutrino models, EVA should detect of order 30 events per flight in the EeV energy regime. For UHE cosmic rays, of order 15,000 geosynchrotron events would be detected in total, several hundred above 10 EeV, and of order 60 above the GZK cutoff energy.
  • Keywords
    Neutrinos , Cosmic-rays
  • Journal title
    Astroparticle Physics
  • Serial Year
    2011
  • Journal title
    Astroparticle Physics
  • Record number

    1336107