Periodic Reporting for period 1 - SolarIC (A New Monitor for Cosmic Rays in the Solar System: Inverse-Compton Emission from Cosmic-Ray Electrons Scattering with Sunlight)
Période du rapport: 2019-09-01 au 2021-08-31
There are two main problems that this project could address. 1) Current gamma-ray observations of the Sun lacks theoretical understanding, and lacks detailed observational exploration. In particular, many of the gamma-ray observations from the solar atmosphere itself is unexplained. 2) These gamma ray production depends on cosmic-ray propagation in the solar system, in particular in the volume between the Earth and the Sun. The properties of the cosmic rays propagation in this volume is poorly understood, and difficult send detector to directly study. Gamma rays could therefore provide an indirect mean to study this.
Understanding this problem is important, as the activities in the solar atmosphere and the how charged particles propagate in the solar system are important components of space weather, which significantly affects satellite operation, astronaut safety, and terrestrial electrical infrastructures. Gamma rays could be a new tool to study this problem, which may offer new insights for better and more accurate space weather modeling.
In addition, I have successful hosted two workshops, one for bachelor students and one for master students. During the workshop, we designed research projects with sub-tasks that these students can take on under our guidance. Both workshops are successful, and results are in preparation for publication. These workshops constitutes important learning experience for the students.
For the student projects, we showed that KM3NeT, the flagship European neutrino telescope can be one of the world's most sensitive dark matter detector, after considering its unique capabilities. Thus, in the future KM3NeT should shed light on the problem of dark matter, one of the most important problem in modern physics.