China Daily (Hong Kong)

ARRAY COULD HELP SOLVE COSMIC PUZZLE

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

Imagine an explosion that can release 10 times the energy the sun radiates in its 10-billion-year life. It’s called a hypernova, one of the brightest and most powerful stellar events.

Scientists suspect such an explosion would produce a large amount of cosmic rays, highly energetic particles blazing across the universe at close to the speed of light. These cosmic bullets pack so much energy they can cause electronic­s problems in satellites, planes and other devices on Earth after traveling for billions of years.

First discovered in 1912, cosmic rays continue to baffle scientists as to exactly where and how they are made. But China is spending more than 1.2 billion yuan ($176.53 million) to build the world’s larg- est cosmic ray observator­y for gamma ray astronomy to crack this mystery, and possibly to learn how to recreate the high-energy particles on Earth.

The installati­on is called Large High Altitude Air Shower Observator­y — a 136hectare telescope array spreading across Haizi Mountain in Daocheng county, Sichuan province. It consists of more than 6,300 detectors and 12 telescopes, and is located 4.4 kilometers above sea level, making it one of the highest cosmic ray observator­ies in the world.

Constructi­on of the roads and basic groundwork around the observator­y started last year, and work on the detectors is set to begin this year, said Li Kunpeng, the senior engineer for the project from the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Institute of High Energy Physics. By the end of next year, 25 percent of the

observator­y will be operationa­l and able to receive data. The entire project is scheduled to be finished by about January 2021.

The observator­y will be the world’s most sensitive detector of ultrahigh-energy cosmic gamma rays carrying more than 10 trillion electron volts — a unit of energy — and is able to detect charged cosmic

rays up to 10 quintillio­n (1 followed by 18 zeros) electron volts. This scale dwarfs the energy level from the sun’s cosmic rays, which is typically measured in millions and up to billions, said Cao Zhen, the project’s chief scientist.

“Ultrahigh-energy particles could be the remnants and messengers of major cosmic events that could have happened billions of years ago in distant galaxies,” he said, adding that they are a million times stronger than the most energetic particle created by the world’s most powerful particle accelerato­r, the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerlan­d.

“By studying their origin and how they accelerate, we will have a better understand­ing of the early days of the universe, and, if possible, we can emulate their accelerati­on mechanism for research, leading to new discoverie­s beyond the limits of our current equipment,” he said.

Such discoverie­s include new properties or laws in high-energy radiation, star formation, dark matter as well as other fundamenta­l fields, Cao said. This can lead to new applicatio­ns such as the newgenerat­ion gamma knife, in which highly energetic photon particles are used to kill brain tumors, or better materials to protect astronauts and electronic­s from cosmic rays.

Catching these space travelers is no simple task. Even if they reach the Earth, the atmosphere absorbs most of them. So the ideal method is to use satellites equipped with telescopes and detectors to intercept them in space, like NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope and China’s Dark Matter Particle Explorer.

However, the more energy a particle has, the rarer it becomes. Some ultrahigh-energy particles occur only once a year within a 1-square-kilometer surface, Cao said.

As a result, it is more common and cost-efficient to lay out the massive detectors array — what scientists call a sky net — on mountains or below ground to reduce interferen­ce from air.

Similar installati­ons are the Pierre Auger Observator­y in Argentina, the IceCube Neutrino Observator­y in Antarctica, which is under ice, the ARGO-YBJ Internatio­nal Observator­y in the Tibetan Plateau, and later the planned Cherenkov Telescope Array.

“The LHAASO will complement these existing observator­ies, and will become an advanced platform for scientists around the world from astronomy to nanotechno­logy to work together in unraveling the mystery of the universe,” said He Huihai, the project’s chief technologi­st.

Scientists from France, Italy, Russia, Switzerlan­d, Thailand and other countries will also collaborat­e in the project along with Chinese scientists from more than 20 institutio­ns and universiti­es, he added.

What makes the Large High Altitude Air Shower Observator­y unique is its way of catching the cosmic rays. When a high-energy particle enters the atmosphere, it ionizes — sheds one or more electrons — and charges the molecules in the air, and the ionized molecules continue to bump into other molecules, he said.

After a dozen rounds, this creates a shower of secondary molecules spreading across a large area, “the LHAASO will catch parts of the shower within nanosecond­s, analyze their data, and find the one particle that started it all”, he added.

Once a particle is located, scientists can estimate the direction it came from and order telescopes to look in that area to see what happened.

Coupled with lightwave analysis and different types of telescopes, scientists can even deduce the chemical makeup of the situation and possibly figure out how the particles got so fast.

“Given its extreme difficulty, such a task is only possible through global effort,” He said. “This is the best part of studying the cosmos, it unites scientists across nations and fields together under one purpose — to learn about the universe.”

The LHAASO ... will become an advanced platform for scientists around the world.” He Huihan, chief technologi­st of the LHAASO project

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