EMMA: A new underground cosmic-ray experiment

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Abstract

A cosmic-ray experiment of new type is under construction in the Pyhäsalmi mine in the underground laboratory of the University of Oulu, Finland. It aims to study the composition of cosmic rays at and above the knee region (energy above 1 PeV). The experiment, called EMMA, covers about 150 m2 of detector area, and the setup is capable of measuring the multiplicity and the lateral distribution of underground muons, and the arrival direction of the air shower. The detector is placed at the depth of about 85 metres (corresponding about 240 mwe) which gives a threshold energy of muons of about 45 GeV. The rock overburden filters out all other particles of the air shower except the high-energy muons. These high-energy muons originate at high altitudes close to the first interaction of the primary cosmic ray and they carry more information about the primary than low-energy muons. The full-size detector is supposed to run by the end of 2007. © 2006 IOP Publishing Ltd.

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Enqvist, T., Föhr, V., Joutsenvaara, J., Jämsén, T., Keränen, P., Kuusiniemi, P., … Fynbo, H. (2006). EMMA: A new underground cosmic-ray experiment. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 39, pp. 478–480). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/39/1/125

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