Search for photons above 10 18 eV by simultaneously measuring the atmospheric depth and the muon content of air showers at the Pierre Auger Observatory
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Show full item recordEditorial
American Physical Society
Date
2024-09-25Referencia bibliográfica
Abdul Halim, A. et al. Search for photons above 10 18 eV by simultaneously measuring the atmospheric depth and the muon content of air showers at the Pierre Auger Observatory. Phys. Rev. D 110, 062005 – 25 September, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.110.062005
Sponsorship
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación/Agencia Estatal de Investigación (Grants No. PID2019–105544 GB-I00, No. PID2022-140510NB-I00, and No. RYC2019-027017-I); Xunta de Galicia (Grants No. GRC GI-2033, No. ED431C-2021/22, No. ED431F-2022/15); Junta de Andalucía (Grants No. SOMM17/6104/UGR and No. P18-FR-4314); European Union (Marie Sklodowska-Curie 101065027); ERDF; Marie Curie-IRSES/EPLANET; European Particle Physics Latin American Network; UNESCO; European Union NextGenerationEU CN_00000013Abstract
The Pierre Auger Observatory is the most sensitive instrument to detect photons with energies above
10 17 eV. It measures extensive air showers generated by ultrahigh energy cosmic rays using a hybrid
technique that exploits the combination of a fluorescence detector with a ground array of particle detectors.
The signatures of a photon-induced air shower are a larger atmospheric depth of the shower maximum
(Xmax ) and a steeper lateral distribution function, along with a lower number of muons with respect to the
bulk of hadron-induced cascades. In this work, a new analysis technique in the energy interval between
1 and 30 EeV (1 EeV ¼ 10 18 eV) has been developed by combining the fluorescence detector-based
measurement of Xmax with the specific features of the surface detector signal through a parameter related to
the air shower muon content, derived from the universality of the air shower development. No evidence of a
statistically significant signal due to photon primaries was found using data collected in about 12 years of
operation. Thus, upper bounds to the integral photon flux have been set using a detailed calculation of the
detector exposure, in combination with a data-driven background estimation. The derived 95% confidence
level upper limits are 0.0403, 0.01113, 0.0035, 0.0023, and 0.0021 km−2 sr−1 yr−1 above 1, 2, 3, 5, and
10 EeV, respectively, leading to the most stringent upper limits on the photon flux in the EeV range.
Compared with past results, the upper limits were improved by about 40% for the lowest energy threshold and
by a factor 3 above 3 EeV, where no candidates were found and the expected background is negligible. The
presented limits can be used to probe the assumptions on chemical composition of ultrahigh energy cosmic
rays and allow for the constraint of the mass and lifetime phase space of super-heavy dark matter particles.