Cosmic Rays
Muons
Detection
CosmicWatch
Cosmology
100

Protons are the most abundant particles.

Which subatomic particles make up the majority of cosmic rays?

100

Both are leptons and have electric charge. Different: Muons are heavier and more unstable.

Similarities and differences between Muons and electrons?

100

It's a large neutrino detector located in Antarctica, consisting of a grid of sensors embedded in the ice.

What is the IceCube Neutrino Observatory?

100

They are detected using a scintillator and a SiPM.

How can muons be detected in the CosmicWatch?

100

The ~2.7K afterglow of the Big Bang.

What is the cosmic microwave background?

200

Supernovae and active galactic nuclei.

Which celestial objects are believed to be the primary source of cosmic rays?

200

Not the most penetrating particles in a cosmic ray showers, but can reach the Earth's surface.

What role do muons play in cosmic ray showers?

200

Examples include scintillation detectors, calorimeters, and cloud chambers.

What are some types of detectors used to measure cosmic particles?

200

single-photon-sensitive device, that is operated in Geiger mode to detect particles.

What is a SiPm(Silicon photomultiplier)?

200

Regions of spacetime where gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape.

What are black holes?

300

A moving shockwave with magnetic inhomogeneties that accelerates a charged particle.

What is the First order Fermi Acceleration?

300

Around 2.2 microseconds.

What is the average lifetime of a muon?

300

A detection area of ca. 3,000 km^2

What is the detection area of the Pierre Auger observatory?

300

The rest of the cosmic shower is filtered out from the Hull.

Why are only Muons detected?

300

A form of matter that does not emit light or electromagnetic radiation.

What is dark matter?

400

Magnetized clouds that work like "magnetic mirrors" and accelerate charged particles when moving towards them and decelerate them when moving in the same direction.

What second order Fermi Acceleration?

400

An electron, neutrino, and an antineutrino

How do muons decay, and what do they decay into?

400

It creates a supersaturated vapor that condenses into visible droplets when a charged particle passes through, allowing its path to be seen.

What is the principle behind the operation of a cloud chamber?

400

The maximum is at ca. 425 nm.

Where is the maximum for the acceptance of the SiPM used in the CosmicWatch and the emitted light of the scintillator?

400

Highly magnetized neutron stars that emit beams of radiation from their magnetic poles.

What are pulsars?

500

A theoretical energy threshold beyond which cosmic rays interact with the cosmic microwave background.

What is the "GZK limit" in cosmic ray physics?

500

They are the main source of Muons in secondary cosmic showers.

What is the role of charged pions in Cosmic showers?

500

The electromagnetic radiation emitted when charged particles travel through a medium faster than light.

What is Cherenkov radiation?

500

Approximately 100 per m^2 and second

how many muons are there on sealevel?

500

The bending of light by gravity, which can magnify and distort the image of a distant object, allowing us to observe objects that might otherwise be too faint to see.

What is gravitational lensing?

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