Abstract

The Extreme Energy Events (EEE) Project is meant to be the most extensive experiment to detect secondary cosmic particles in Italy. To this aim, more than 50 telescopes have been built at CERN and installed in high schools distributed all over the Italian territory. Each EEE telescope comprises three large area Multigap Resistive Plate Chambers (MRPCs) and is capable of reconstructing the trajectories of the charged particles traversing it with a good angular resolution. The excellent performance of the EEE telescopes allows a large variety of studies, from measuring the local muon flux in a single telescope, to detecting extensive air showers producing time correlations in the same metropolitan area, to searching for large-scale correlations between showers detected in telescopes tens, hundreds or thousands of kilometers apart. In addition to its scientific goal, the EEE Project also has an educational and outreach objective, its aim being to motivate young people by involving them directly in a real experiment. High school students and teachers are involved in the construction, testing and start-up of the EEE telescope in their school, then in its maintenance and data-acquisition, and later in the analysis of the data. During the last couple of years a great boost has been given to the EEE Project through the organization of simultaneous and centralized data taking with the whole telescope array. The raw data from all telescopes are transferred to CNAF (Bologna), where they are reconstructed and stored. The data are currently being analyzed, looking at various topics: variation of the rate of cosmic muons with time, upward going muons, muon lifetime, search for anisotropies in the muon angular distribution and for time coincidences between stations. In this paper an overall description of the experiment is given, including the design, construction and performance of the telescopes. The operation of the whole array is also presented by showing the most recent physics results.

Highlights

  • The Energy Events (EEE) Experiment2.1 General description of the Project The EEE Project was conceived in 2004 and is a collaboration of Centro Fermi [2], INFN [3] and CERN [4]

  • This content has been downloaded from IOPscience

  • Each Energy Events (EEE) telescope comprises three large area Multigap Resistive Plate Chambers (MRPCs) and is capable of reconstructing the trajectories of the charged particles traversing it with a good angular resolution

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Summary

The EEE Experiment

2.1 General description of the Project The EEE Project was conceived in 2004 and is a collaboration of Centro Fermi [2], INFN [3] and CERN [4]. Each chamber is equipped on both short sides with a Front End (FE) electronics board based on the NINO asic [7]: the signals from the strips are amplified, discriminated and subsequently acquired by means of two high resolution commercial multi-hit TDCs. Each 24-channel FE board provides the OR of the 24 inputs in order to produce a trigger signal given by the six-fold coincidence of the OR signals from both sides of all three MRPCs. The whole data acquisition system makes use of VME standards: the TDC modules and the trigger card are slotted into a VME crate that is connected to the DAQ computer by means of a CAEN USB-VME. Data from Oregon Scientific weather stations are integrated into the binary output files in order to correct the collected data for meteorological effects

Current status of the Project
Performance of the EEE telescopes
Examples of physics studies
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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