Modeling of the TeV cosmic-ray anisotropy based on intensity mapping in an MHD-simulated heliosphere

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  • uploaded June 25, 2021

Discussion timeslot (ZOOM-Meeting): 16. July 2021 - 18:00
ZOOM-Meeting URL: https://icrc2021.desy.de/pf_access_abstracts
Corresponding Session: https://icrc2021-venue.desy.de/channel/Presenter-Forum-1-Evening-All-Categories/48
Abstract:
"Arrival directions of galactic cosmic rays observed at the Earth are not completely uniform, at TeV energies there are small yet significant anisotropic features with amplitudes of roughly 0.1% such as large-scale deficit and excess regions called “Loss-Cone” and “Tail-In”, respectively. The origin of the anisotropy has not been known yet, although the anisotropy is considered to reflect how cosmic rays propagate through magnetic fields in the heliosphere and the surrounding interstellar medium. Recent studies make use of the ‘intensity-mapping’ method, in which heliospheric magnetic field structures are reconstructed by MHD simulations, trajectories of cosmic rays are calculated in the MHD-simulated heliosphere, and then the cosmic-ray intensity distribution observed at the Earth is mapped onto that at the outer boundary ideally outside the heliosphere based on Liouville's theorem.rnIn this presentation, we preform the modeling of the TeV cosmic-ray anisotropy outside the heliosphere using experimental data taken by the Tibet AS$gamma$ experiment. In the intensity-mapping process, we take into account for the first time the rigidity distribution of cosmic-ray particles observed by the experiment. We also discuss the influence of the heliospheric modulation on the cosmic-ray intensity distribution by varying the distance of the outer boundary from the Sun in the intensity-mapping process."

Authors: Takashi K. Sako | For the Tibet ASgamma Collaboration
Collaboration: The Tibet ASgamma Collaboration

Indico-ID: 722
Proceeding URL: https://pos.sissa.it/395/1286

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Presenter: Takashi K. Sako

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