Mini neutron monitors at Concordia research station, Central Antarctica

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Abstract

Two mini neutron monitors are installed at Concordia research station (Dome C, Central Antarctica, 75°06'S, 123°23'E, 3,233 m.a.s.l.). The site has unique properties ideal for cosmic ray measurements, especially for the detection of solar energetic particles: very low cutoff rigidity < 0.01 GV, high elevation and poleward asymptotic acceptance cones pointing to geographical latitudes > 75°S. The instruments consist of a standard neutron monitor and a "bare" (lead-free) neutron monitor. The instrument operation started in mid-January 2015. The barometric correction coefficients were computed for the period from 1 February to 31 July 2015. Several interesting events, including two notable Forbush decreases on 17 March 2015 and 22 June 2015, and a solar particle event of 29 October 2015 were registered. The data sets are available at cosmicrays.oulu.fi and nmdb.eu.

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Poluianov, S., Usoskin, I., Mishev, A., Moraal, H., Krüger, H., Casasanta, G., … Udisti, R. (2015). Mini neutron monitors at Concordia research station, Central Antarctica. Journal of Astronomy and Space Sciences, 32(4), 281–287. https://doi.org/10.5140/JASS.2015.32.4.281

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