Calculation of the exposure of GRANDProto300 to cosmic rays (2507.06629v1)
Abstract: GRANDProto300 is one of the prototype experiments of the Giant Radio Array for Neutrino Detection. It will feature about 300 radio antenna detectors in Xiaodushang in Dunhuang, China, covering a total geometrical area of about 200 km$2$. A main scientific goal of GRANDProto300 is the study of cosmic rays in the transition region ($10{17}\, {\rm eV} < E < 10{18.5}\, {\rm eV}$). Our study calculates the exposure of GRANDProto300 to cosmic rays and estimates the number of cosmic-ray events to be detected during a fixed observation period. The trigger efficiency reaches 50, 80, and 90% at $10{17.5}$, $10{17.9}$, and $10{18.3}\, {\rm eV}$, respectively. The exposure of GRANDProto300 is 50 km$2$ day sr at around $10{17.5}$ eV, and the expected number of observed cosmic rays with energies above $10{17}$ eV and zenith angles above 65${\circ}$ is about 130 events per day. GRANDProto300 will be able to measure the cosmic-ray energy spectrum in $10{17.2}\, {\rm eV} < E < 10{19.5}\, {\rm eV}$ through one-year observation, with a statistical precision about five times better than the previous spectral measurement by a mono-fluorescence detector of the Telescope Array Low-Energy Extension. The statistical uncertainty in the measurement of the mean depth of the air-shower maximum $X_{\rm max}$ is about five times better than the previous measurements using radio detectors at $10{17.5}$ eV; systematic uncertainties should be a dominant contribution limiting our interpretation of the chemical composition of cosmic rays in the transition region.
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