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Main Authors: Vargas, Hermes León, Galván, Antonio, Sandoval, Andrés, Belmont, Ernesto, Salguero, Cindy Castellón, Muñoz, Adiv González
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.21373
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author Vargas, Hermes León
Galván, Antonio
Sandoval, Andrés
Belmont, Ernesto
Salguero, Cindy Castellón
Muñoz, Adiv González
author_facet Vargas, Hermes León
Galván, Antonio
Sandoval, Andrés
Belmont, Ernesto
Salguero, Cindy Castellón
Muñoz, Adiv González
contents The atmosphere provides a large set of experimental conditions on which cosmic-ray induced high-energy hadron interactions can take place. These conditions include: sudden changes in the atmospheric pressure, temperature, and in the local electric and magnetic fields. In this talk we introduce the Piritakua (flash of lightning, in the language of the pre-Columbian Purépecha Empire in Mexico) project, a cosmic-ray detector located at the Instituto de Física of UNAM, in Mexico City at 2280 m. a.s.l. The experiment consists of a small array of scintillator detectors, which use the electronics developed by the CosmicWatch project. The scintillators operate simultaneously with an electric field meter, a magnetometer, a meteorological station, and a hemispheric camera. We propose to use Piritakua to study the modification of the secondary particle production and propagation under sudden variations in the standard atmospheric properties. We present the current status and the first results of the experiment.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2507_21373
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Piritakua: the atmosphere as a high-energy physics laboratory
Vargas, Hermes León
Galván, Antonio
Sandoval, Andrés
Belmont, Ernesto
Salguero, Cindy Castellón
Muñoz, Adiv González
High Energy Physics - Experiment
The atmosphere provides a large set of experimental conditions on which cosmic-ray induced high-energy hadron interactions can take place. These conditions include: sudden changes in the atmospheric pressure, temperature, and in the local electric and magnetic fields. In this talk we introduce the Piritakua (flash of lightning, in the language of the pre-Columbian Purépecha Empire in Mexico) project, a cosmic-ray detector located at the Instituto de Física of UNAM, in Mexico City at 2280 m. a.s.l. The experiment consists of a small array of scintillator detectors, which use the electronics developed by the CosmicWatch project. The scintillators operate simultaneously with an electric field meter, a magnetometer, a meteorological station, and a hemispheric camera. We propose to use Piritakua to study the modification of the secondary particle production and propagation under sudden variations in the standard atmospheric properties. We present the current status and the first results of the experiment.
title Piritakua: the atmosphere as a high-energy physics laboratory
topic High Energy Physics - Experiment
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.21373