\/svg>","ionicons-filled--link":"<\/svg>"}) Accessibility Tools Invert colors Monochrome Dark contrast Light contrast Low saturation High saturation Highlight links Highlight headings Screen reader Read mode Content scaling 100% Font size 100% Line height 100% Letter spacing 100% Skip to main content PL The Institute The Institute General information Emploees News Scientific News Gender equality plan Address and contact data Research Research profile List of publications Information in BIP Scientific Council Organizational structure GDPR Events Seminars Current seminars List of seminars Conferences Current conferences Past conferences For students Doctoral school General Information Curriculum Recruitment School Council Doctoral Student Council Teaching Doctoral students Mid-term evaluation For students Master theses Student training Visiting the Institute For employees Institute e-mail Eduroam Publication registry Contact us Address and contact data Important phone numbers and emails PL The Institute The Institute General information Emploees News Scientific News Gender equality plan Address and contact data Research Research profile List of publications Information in BIP Scientific Council Organizational structure GDPR Events Seminars Current seminars List of seminars Conferences Current conferences Past conferences For students Doctoral school General Information Curriculum Recruitment School Council Doctoral Student Council Teaching Doctoral students Mid-term evaluation For students Master theses Student training Visiting the Institute For employees Institute e-mail Eduroam Publication registry Contact us Address and contact data Important phone numbers and emails Events Home Events List of seminars Seminar of the Institute of Theoretical Physics of University of Wrocław 12:15, 17-06-16 UWr, pl. Maksa Borna 9, sala 422 Cosmic-Ray Extremely Distributed Observatory: new research possibilities in astroparticle physicsdr hab. Piotr HomolaIFJ PANCosmic-Ray Extremely Distributed Observatory (CREDO) enables a strategy for a global analysis of cosmic-ray data oriented on reaching the observational sensitivity to ensembles of particles of cosmic origin correlated in time: so-called cosmic-ray cascades. The CREDO approach defines a pioneer, although natural extension of a standard cosmic-ray research focused so far on single particles uncorrelated in time. Cosmic-ray cascades could be formed both within classical (e.g. products of photon-photon interactions) and exotic scenarios (e.g. result of decay of Super Heavy Dark Matter particles and subsequent interactions) and CREDO asks about the circumstances under which such phenomena can be observed. The spatial extent of some of cosmic-ray cascades that reach Earth might offer a unique signature detectable only with the cosmic-ray infrastructure taken as a global network of detectors, signature invisible for individual observatories. Thus the global approach to the detection of cosmic-ray cascades might be the only realistic option. The existing uncertainties about the available physics models at very high energies (photon structure, electrodynamics, space-time structure) as well as insufficient knowledge about the propagation mechanisms, makes one thinking on the CREDO research strategy like of a wide physics program rather than of a short-term project. A wide program requires a wide community of collaborators and that is why everybody is welcome to contribute to CREDO.
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Cosmic-Ray Extremely Distributed Observatory (CREDO) enables a strategy for a global analysis of cosmic-ray data oriented on reaching the observational sensitivity to ensembles of particles of cosmic origin correlated in time: so-called cosmic-ray cascades. The CREDO approach defines a pioneer, although natural extension of a standard cosmic-ray research focused so far on single particles uncorrelated in time. Cosmic-ray cascades could be formed both within classical (e.g. products of photon-photon interactions) and exotic scenarios (e.g. result of decay of Super Heavy Dark Matter particles and subsequent interactions) and CREDO asks about the circumstances under which such phenomena can be observed. The spatial extent of some of cosmic-ray cascades that reach Earth might offer a unique signature detectable only with the cosmic-ray infrastructure taken as a global network of detectors, signature invisible for individual observatories. Thus the global approach to the detection of cosmic-ray cascades might be the only realistic option. The existing uncertainties about the available physics models at very high energies (photon structure, electrodynamics, space-time structure) as well as insufficient knowledge about the propagation mechanisms, makes one thinking on the CREDO research strategy like of a wide physics program rather than of a short-term project. A wide program requires a wide community of collaborators and that is why everybody is welcome to contribute to CREDO.