Exploring the Frontiers of Cosmic Ray Physics: Perspectives on GRANDProto300 and the GRAND Project (2506.16274v1)
Abstract: The Giant Radio Array for Neutrino Detection (GRAND) is an envisioned large-scale radio array designed to detect ultra-high-energy cosmic rays (UHECRs, $E > 100$ PeV) and neutrinos. Employing cost-effective antennas distributed across vast areas, GRAND is optimized to observe the rare flux of ultra-high-energy particles with high precision. The GRANDProto300 (GP300) pathfinder array, currently under deployment, targets the $10{16.5} - 10{18}$ eV range and is anticipated to achieve approximately 15\% energy resolution and 20g/cm$2$ $X_{\mathrm{max}}$ precision. This level of precision enables accurate measurements of the fine structure of the energy spectrum, mean logarithmic mass ($\langle \ln A \rangle$), and proton flux within this range. After five years of data collection, the sensitivity for detecting anisotropy could reach $5 \times 10{-3}$ for energies below $10{17.1}$ eV. With its substantially larger effective area, GRAND extends these capabilities to the highest energies ($\sim 10{20}$ eV), offering enhanced statistics and sensitivity for spectral, composition, and anisotropy measurements within one year for UHECRs.
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