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  • Extremely high energy cosmi...
    Boratav, M.

    RADECS 97. Fourth European Conference on Radiation and its Effects on Components and Systems (Cat. No.97TH8294), 1997
    Conference Proceeding

    Over the last 30 years or so, a handful of events observed in ground-based cosmic ray detectors seem to have opened a new window in the field of high-energy astrophysics. These events have energies exceeding 5/spl times/10/sup 19/ eV (the region of the so-called Greisen-Zatsepin-Kuzmin spectral cutoff); they seem to come from no known astrophysical source; their chemical composition is mostly unknown; no conventional accelerating mechanism is considered as being able to explain their production and propagation to Earth. Only a dedicated detector can bring in the high-quality and statistically significant data needed to solve this long-lasting puzzle: this is the aim of the Anger Observatory project around which a world-wide collaboration is being mobilised. A large amount of information and technical documents can be consulted on many Web pages accessible through: http://www-lpnhep.in2p3.fr/auger/.