Cosmic Rays and Dark Matter Detection

A special issue of Universe (ISSN 2218-1997). This special issue belongs to the section "Space Science".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 31 December 2024 | Viewed by 1514

Special Issue Editors

School of Science, Shenzhen Campus of Sun Yat-sen University, Shenzhen 518107, China
Interests: cosmic rays and dark matter detection; cosmic ray acceleration and propagation

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Guest Editor
Departamento de Física, Instituto Superior Técnico - IST, Universidade de Lisboa - UL, Avenida Rovisco Pais 1, 1049-001 Lisboa, Portugal
Interests: cosmic rays; solar modulation; Cerenkov detectors

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Guest Editor
Laboratoire d'Annecy de Physique des Particules, 9 Chemin de Bellevue, BP 110, Annecy-le-Vieux, CEDEX, F-74941 Annecy, France
Interests: astroparticle; gamma ray astronomy

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Cosmic rays (CRs) were discovered by Victor Franz Hess, when he observed ionizing radiation in the atmosphere increased with altitude in 1911 and 1913. After one century of rapid developments, mankind enters a new era of cosmic ray detection with ground-based and space-based particle detectors. Ground-based experiments, such as ARGO-YBJ, HESS, HAWC, CTA, MAGIC, Tibet AS-gamma, LHAASO and ICE-CUBE, detect the particle shower, created by the interaction of the primary CR with the earth atmosphere, either directly or in an indirect way through the Cerenkov imaging technique. On the other hand, direct measurements are carried out by balloon or space detectors, such as ATIC, BESS, CAPRICE/WiZard, CREAM, Fermi-LAT, MASS, HEAT, PAMELA, AMS-02, CALET and DAMPE. Those measurements are based on the CR direct interactions with detectors. The advantages of ground-based experiments are their large acceptance and higher energy range, while space-based experiments show higher precision in measuring the energy scale and can identify the CR species.

Dark matter (DM) was discovered by Fritz Zwicky and others by studying clusters of galaxies in 1933. After one century of study, we still know little about DM. Other evidence of DM, including CMB observations and the effect of gravitational lensing, exists. There are some candidates for DM, e.g., weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs), axion-like particles (ALPs), primordial black holes, etc. For WIMPs and ALPs, detections are carried out in three complementary ways, i.e., dark matter production, direct detection with underground instruments and indirect detection in CRs.

DM annihilation or decay may produce extra-elementary CRs, including neutral particles (photons and neutrinos) and charged ones (positrons and antiprotons). Thus, CR is an important way to understand DM.

In this Special Issue, we will collect original work and review articles, related to the experiments and theories on CRs and DM, including instrumentation, advances in data analysis and beyond the standard model theories.

We look forward to receiving your valuable contributions.

Dr. Jie Feng
Prof. Fernando Barão
Dr. Sami Caroff
Guest Editors

Manuscript Submission Information

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Keywords

  • cosmic ray
  • dark matter
  • photons
  • neutrino
  • axion
  • black hole
  • WIMP
  • astroparticle
  • solar modulation
  • Cerenkov detectors

Published Papers (1 paper)

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Research

16 pages, 1691 KiB  
Article
Study of Angular Resolution Using Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Technique
by Jinrui Liu, Hanxun Wu, Qi Liu, Yujie Ji, Rui Xu, Feng Zhang and Hu Liu
Universe 2024, 10(2), 100; https://doi.org/10.3390/universe10020100 - 18 Feb 2024
Viewed by 1060
Abstract
Angular resolution is crucial for the detailed study of gamma-ray sources and current Cherenkov telescopes (e.g., HESS, MAGIC, and VERITAS) that operate below tens of TeV. Several gamma-ray sources with a photon energy larger than 100 TeV have been revealed by the LHAASO [...] Read more.
Angular resolution is crucial for the detailed study of gamma-ray sources and current Cherenkov telescopes (e.g., HESS, MAGIC, and VERITAS) that operate below tens of TeV. Several gamma-ray sources with a photon energy larger than 100 TeV have been revealed by the LHAASO in recent years; the angular resolution of the LHAASO is around 0.3. A gamma-ray detector with an angular resolution of less than 0.1 operating beyond 100 TeV is needed to study the detailed morphology of ultra-high-energy gamma-ray sources further. The cost-effectiveness is crucial for such large-area detectors. In this paper, the impact of telescope aperture, field of view, pixel size, optical point spread function, and signal integration time window on angular resolution is studied. These results can provide essential elements for the design of telescope arrays. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Cosmic Rays and Dark Matter Detection)
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