Surface detectors of the TAx4 experiment

Telescope Array Collaboration,R. U. Abbasi,M. Abe,T. Abu-Zayyad,M. Allen,Y. Arai,E. Barcikowski,J. W. Belz,D. R. Bergman,S. A. Blake,R. Cady,B. G. Cheon,J. Chiba,M. Chikawa,T. Fujii,K. Fujisue,K. Fujita,R. Fujiwara,M. Fukushima,R. Fukushima,G. Furlich,W. Hanlon,M. Hayashi,N. Hayashida,K. Hibino,R. Higuchi,K. Honda,D. Ikeda,T. Inadomi,N. Inoue,T. Ishii,H. Ito,D. Ivanov,H. Iwakura,H. M. Jeong,S. Jeong,C. C. H. Jui,K. Kadota,F. Kakimoto,O. Kalashev,K. Kasahara,S. Kasami,H. Kawai,S. Kawakami,S. Kawana,K. Kawata,E. Kido,H. B. Kim,J. H. Kim,M. H. Kim,S. W. Kim,Y. Kimura,S. Kishigami,V. Kuzmin,M. Kuznetsov,Y. J. Kwon,K. H. Lee,B. Lubsandorzhiev,J. P. Lundquist,K. Machida,H. Matsumiya,T. Matsuyama,J. N. Matthews,R. Mayta,M. Minamino,K. Mukai,I. Myers,S. Nagataki,K. Nakai,R. Nakamura,T. Nakamura,Y. Nakamura,T. Nonaka,H. Oda,S. Ogio,M. Ohnishi,H. Ohoka,Y. Oku,T. Okuda,Y. Omura,M. Ono,R. Onogi,A. Oshima,S. Ozawa,I. H. Park,M. S. Pshirkov,J. Remington,D. C. Rodriguez,G. I. Rubtsov,D. Ryu,H. Sagawa,R. Sahara,Y. Saito,N. Sakaki,T. Sako,N. Sakurai,K. Sano,K. Sato,T. Seki,K. Sekino,P. D. Shah,F. Shibata,N. Shibata,T. Shibata,H. Shimodaira,B. K. Shin,H. S. Shin,D. Shinto,J. D. Smith,P. Sokolsky,N. Sone,B. T. Stokes,T. A. Stroman,T. Suzawa,Y. Takagi,Y. Takahashi,M. Takamura,M. Takeda,R. Takeishi,A. Taketa,M. Takita,Y. Tameda,H. Tanaka,K. Tanaka,M. Tanaka,Y. Tanoue,S. B. Thomas,G. B. Thomson,P. Tinyakov,I. Tkachev,H. Tokuno,T. Tomida,S. Troitsky,R. Tsuda,Y. Tsunesada,Y. Uchihori,S. Udo,T. Uehama,F. Urban,T. Wong,K. Yada,M. Yamamoto,K. Yamazaki,J. Yang,K. Yashiro,F. Yoshida,Y. Zhezher,Z. Zundel

NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION A-ACCELERATORS SPECTROMETERS DETECTORS AND ASSOCIATED EQUIPMENT(2021)

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Abstract
Telescope Array (TA) is the largest ultrahigh energy cosmic-ray (UHECR) observatory in the Northern Hemisphere. It explores the origin of UHECRs by measuring their energy spectrum, arrival-direction distribution, and mass composition using a surface detector (SD) array covering approximately 700 km(2) and fluorescence detector (FD) stations. TA has found evidence for a cluster of cosmic rays with energies greater than 57 EeV. In order to confirm this evidence with more data, it is necessary to increase the data collection rate. We have begun building an expansion of TA that we call TAx4. In this paper, we explain the motivation, design, technical features, and expected performance of the TAx4 SD. We also present TAx4's current status and examples of the data that have already been collected.
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Key words
Ultrahigh energy cosmic rays, Extensive air shower array
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