English

The HiSPARC Experiment

Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics 2020-02-26 v2 High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena

Abstract

The High School Project on Astrophysics Research with Cosmics (HiSPARC) is a large extensive air shower (EAS) array with detection stations throughout the Netherlands, United Kingdom, Denmark and Namibia. HiSPARC is a collaboration of universities, scientific institutes and high schools. The majority of detection stations is hosted by high schools. A HiSPARC station consists of two or four scintillators placed inside roof boxes on top of a building. The measured response of a detector to single incoming muons agrees well with GEANT4 simulations. The response of a station to EASs agrees with simulations as well. A four-scintillator station was integrated in the KASCADE experiment and was used to determine the accuracy of the shower direction reconstruction. Using simulations, the trigger efficiency of a station to detect a shower as function of both distance to the shower core and zenith angle was determined. The HiSPARC experiment is taking data since 2003. The number of stations (~140 in 2019) still increases. The project demonstrates that its approach is viable for educational purposes and that scientific data can be obtained in a collaboration with high school students and teachers.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1908.01622,
  title  = {The HiSPARC Experiment},
  author = {K. van Dam and B. van Eijk and D. B. R. A. Fokkema and J. W. van Holten and A. P. L. S. de Laat and N. G. Schultheiss and J. J. M. Steijger and J. C. Verkooijen},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1908.01622},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

Accepted for publication in NIM A

R2 v1 2026-06-23T10:39:46.781Z