Detailed Information on Publication Record
2022
Simulation of the Isotropic Ultra-High Energy Photon Flux in the Solar Magnetic Field
PONCYLJUSZ, Bozena, Tomasz BULIK, Niraj DHITAL, Oleksandr SUSHCHOV, Slawomir STUGLIK et. al.Basic information
Original name
Simulation of the Isotropic Ultra-High Energy Photon Flux in the Solar Magnetic Field
Authors
PONCYLJUSZ, Bozena, Tomasz BULIK, Niraj DHITAL, Oleksandr SUSHCHOV, Slawomir STUGLIK, Piotr HOMOLA, David ALVAREZ-CASTILLO, Marcin PIEKARCZYK, Tadeusz WIBIG, Jaroslaw STASIELAK, Peter KOVACS, Katarzyna SMELCERZ, Dolores Maria RODRIGUEZ FRIAS, Michal NIEDZWIECKI, Justyna MISZCZYK, Tomasz SOSNICKI, Lukasz BIBRZYCKI, Arman TURSUNOV (860 Uzbekistan, belonging to the institution), Luis DEL PERAL and Krzysztof RZECKI
Edition
Universe, Switzerland, 2022, 2218-1997
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Článek v odborném periodiku
Field of Study
10308 Astronomy
Country of publisher
Switzerland
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
References:
RIV identification code
RIV/47813059:19630/22:A0000233
Organization unit
Institute of physics in Opava
UT WoS
000873504100001
Keywords in English
cosmic rays; ultra-high energy photons; cosmic ray ensembles
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 13/2/2023 08:53, Mgr. Pavlína Jalůvková
Abstract
V originále
Both the lack of observation of ultra-high energy (UHE) photons and the limitations of the state-of-the-art methodology being applied for their identification motivate studies on alternative approaches to the relevant simulations and the related observational strategies. One such new approach is proposed in this report and it concerns new observables allowing indirect identification of UHE photons through cosmic ray phenomena composed of many spatially correlated extensive air showers or primary cosmic rays observed at one time. The study is based on simulations of interactions of UHE photons with the magnetic field of the Sun using the PRESHOWER program with some essential modifications. One of the expected results of such interactions is a generation of cosmic ray ensembles (CREs) in the form of very thin and very elongated cascades of secondary photons of energies spanning the whole cosmic ray energy spectrum. Upon entering the Earth's atmosphere, these cascades or their parts may generate uniquely characteristic walls of spatially correlated extensive air showers, and the effect is expected also in cases when primary UHE photons are not directed towards the Earth. Particle distributions in these multi-primary UHE photon footprints are expected to have thicknesses of the order of meters and elongations reaching even hundreds of millions of kilometers, making them potentially observable with a global, multi-experiment approach, including re-exploring of the historical data, with the expected event rate exceeding the capabilities of even very large cosmic ray observatories. In this report, we introduce for the first time the methods allowing for simulating the isotropic flux of UHE photons in the Sun's vicinity. Presented methods were verified and optimised in such a way that they would successfully model the cumulative spatial distribution of secondary photons at the top of the atmosphere. The preliminary results of simulations for the UHE photon flux of energy 100 EeV demonstrate the possibility of simulating potentially observable quantities related to CRE induced by UHE photons: densities, energy spectra and geographical orientations of secondary particles at the top of the Earth's atmosphere. A measurement of at least one of these quantities would be equivalent to a confirmation of the existence of UHE photons, which would give an insight into fundamental physics processes at unprecedentedly high energies, far beyond the reach of man-made accelerators. On the other hand, a lack of such an observation would allow for further constraining of these fundamental processes with the physically new upper limits on UHE photon fluxes after careful analysis of the technical observation ability. The novel advantage of such an approach would lay in the purely electrodynamical character of the underlying simulations which are fully independent on extrapolations of hadronic interaction models by many orders of magnitude. Such extrapolations are necessary in the UHE photon identification methods based on the analyses of properties of individual extensive air showers presently used to determine the UHE photon upper limits.