The muon intensity in the Felsenkeller shallow underground laboratory
Abstract
The muon intensity and angular distribution in the shallow-underground laboratory Felsenkeller in Dresden, Germany have been studied using a portable muon detector based on the close cathode chamber design. Data has been taken at four positions in Felsenkeller tunnels VIII and IX, where a new 5 MV underground ion accelerator is being installed, and in addition at four positions in Felsenkeller tunnel IV, which hosts a low-radioactivity counting facility. At each of the eight positions studied, seven different orientations of the detector were used to compile a map of the upper hemisphere with 0.85∘ angular resolution. The muon intensity is found to be suppressed by a factor of 40 due to the 45 m thick rock overburden, corresponding to 140 m water equivalent. The angular data are matched by two different simulations taking into account the known geodetic features of the terrain: First, simply by determining the cutoff energy using the projected slant depth in rock and the known muon energy spectrum, and second, in a Geant4 simulation propagating the muons through a column of rock equal to the known slant depth. The present data are instrumental for studying muon-induced effects at these depths and also in the planning of an active veto for accelerator-based underground nuclear astrophysics experiments.
- Publication:
-
Astroparticle Physics
- Pub Date:
- November 2019
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1904.11501
- Bibcode:
- 2019APh...112...24L
- Keywords:
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- Muon intensity;
- Underground laboratories;
- Geant4;
- Nuclear astrophysics;
- Wire chambers;
- Muon tomography;
- Muon radiography;
- Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors;
- Nuclear Experiment
- E-Print:
- Submitted to Astroparticle Physics