12–23 Jul 2021
Online
Europe/Berlin timezone

The Mini-EUSO telescope on board the International Space Station: Launch and first results

15 Jul 2021, 18:00
1h 30m
03

03

Talk CRI | Cosmic Ray Indirect Discussion

Speaker

Marco Casolino (RIKEN and INFN)

Description

Mini-EUSO is a detector observing the Earth in the ultraviolet band from the International Space Station. It was launched in 2019 in the framework of the "Beyond" mission and as part of an agreement between Russian and Italian space agencies.
The main camera has an optical system with two double-sided Fresnel lenses and a focal surface with 2304 channels and a field of view of 44$^o$. The observed bandwidth is in the range 290-430 nm, where emissions from Nitrogen de-excitation of Ultra-High Energy cosmic rays Extensive Air showers are located. The telescope observes the Earth with a pixel size of 6.3 km, sampling of 2.5μs, through a nadir-facing UV-transparent window in the Russian Zvezda module. It also has two cameras in the near infrared and visible ranges and Silicon Photomultipliers. Mini-EUSO is capable of observing Extensive Air Showers generated by Cosmic Rays with energy above 10^21 eV and detect artificial showers generated from the ground with LED flashers and lasers. Among the scientific objectives are the search for nuclearites and Strange Quark Matter, the study of atmospheric phenomena such as Transient luminous events, meteors and meteoroids, the observation of artificial satellites and man-made space debris.
In this talk we will present the launch, the first results and the perspectives for observations in light of the flight of EUSO-SPB2 and future missions such as K-EUSO and Poemma.

Keywords

International Space Station; UHECR; Fluorescence detectors; Strange Quark Matter;

Subcategory Experimental Results
Collaboration other (fill field below)
other Collaboration JEM-EUSO

Primary authors

Marco Casolino (RIKEN and INFN) Prof. Pavel Klimov (MSU)

Presentation materials