Inference of the Mass Composition of Cosmic Rays with Energies from 10^18.5 to 10^20 eV Using the Pierre Auger Observatory and Deep Learning
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
American Physical Society
Fecha
2025-01-13Referencia bibliográfica
A. Abdul Halim et al. (Pierre Auger Collaboration), (2025). Inference of the mass composition of cosmic rays with energies from 10^{18.5} to 10^{20} eV using the Pierre Auger Observatory and deep learning. Physical Review Letters, 134(2), 021001. [DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.134.021001]
Patrocinador
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación/Agencia Estatal de Investigación (PID2019–105544 GBI00, PID2022-140510NB-I00, and RYC2019-027017-I); Junta de Andalucía (SOMM17/6104/UGR and P18-FR-4314); European Union (Marie Sklodowska-Curie 101065027 and ERDF); European Union - NextGenerationEU (CN_00000013)Resumen
We present measurements of the atmospheric depth of the shower maximum 𝑋�max, inferred for the first time on an event-by-event level using the surface detector of the Pierre Auger Observatory. Using deep learning, we were able to extend measurements of the 𝑋�max distributions up to energies of 100 EeV (1020 eV), not yet revealed by current measurements, providing new insights into the mass composition of cosmic rays at extreme energies. Gaining a 10-fold increase in statistics compared to the fluorescence detector data, we find evidence that the rate of change of the average 𝑋�max with the logarithm of energy features three breaks at 6.5±0.6(stat)±1(syst) EeV, 11 ±2(stat) ±1(syst) EeV, and 31 ±5(stat) ±3(syst) EeV, in the vicinity to the three prominent features (ankle, instep, suppression) of the cosmic-ray flux. The energy evolution of the mean and standard deviation of the measured 𝑋�max distributions indicates that the mass composition becomes increasingly heavier and purer, thus being incompatible with a large fraction of light nuclei between 50 and 100 EeV.





