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Implications of Mini-EUSO measurements for a space-based observation of UHECRs

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arxiv 2308.13723 v1 pith:UZQVO6HF submitted 2023-08-26 astro-ph.IM physics.space-ph

Implications of Mini-EUSO measurements for a space-based observation of UHECRs

classification astro-ph.IM physics.space-ph
keywords mini-eusochannelsjem-eusomeasurementsmissionobservationsspacespace-based
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Mini-EUSO is the first mission of the JEM-EUSO program on board the International Space Station. It was launched in August 2019 and it is operating since October 2019 being located in the Russian section (Zvezda module) of the station and viewing our planet from a nadir-facing UV-transparent window. The instrument is based on the concept of the original JEM-EUSO mission and consists of an optical system employing two Fresnel lenses of 25 cm each and a focal surface composed of 36 Multi-Anode Photomultiplier tubes, 64 channels each, for a total of 2304 channels with single photon counting sensitivity and an overall field of view of 44$\times$44$^\circ$. Mini-EUSO can map the night-time Earth in the near UV range (predominantly between 290 nm and 430 nm), with a spatial resolution of about 6.3 km and different temporal resolutions of 2.5 $\mu$s, 320 $\mu$s and 41 ms. Mini-EUSO observations are extremely important to better assess the potential of a space-based detector in studying Ultra-High Energy Cosmic Rays (UHECRs) such as K-EUSO and POEMMA. In this contribution we focus the attention on the results of the UV measurements and we place them in the context of UHECR observations from space, namely the estimation of exposure.

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