A new neutron monitor at the Juan Carlos I Spanish Antarctic Station (Livingston Island-Antarctic Peninsula)

Last January 2019, a new neutron monitor was installed at Juan Carlos I Spanish Antarctic Station (62º 39’ 46’’ S, 60º23’20’’ W, 12 m asl) located in Livingston Island (South Shetland Archipelago) close to the Antarctic Peninsula. The vertical rigidity cut-off for this new station is estimated as 3....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Blanco, Juan José, García Población, Óscar, García Tejedor, Juan Ignacio, Ayuso, Sindulfo, López-Comazzi, Alejandro, Vrublevskyy, Iván, Steigies, Christian
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.38072/2748-3150/p18
https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:gbv:8:3-2021-00276-6
https://macau.uni-kiel.de/receive/macau_mods_00001314
https://macau.uni-kiel.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/macau_derivate_00002377/kiel-up_%202748-3150_p18.pdf
Description
Summary:Last January 2019, a new neutron monitor was installed at Juan Carlos I Spanish Antarctic Station (62º 39’ 46’’ S, 60º23’20’’ W, 12 m asl) located in Livingston Island (South Shetland Archipelago) close to the Antarctic Peninsula. The vertical rigidity cut-off for this new station is estimated as 3.52 GV. This new station (ORC) is composed of a BF3-based 3NM64 (ORCA) and 3 bare BF3 counters (ORCB). The neutron monitor is complemented by a muon telescope sharing a common room in a single stack. ORCA and ORCB with the Castilla-La Mancha neutron monitor (CaLMa) are the Spanish contributions to the Neutron Monitor Data Base. Because Juan Carlos I station is a summer station, one minute data is providing once a day during the Antarctic summer. One hour data are sent once a day during Antarctic winter. First measurements and future plans are provided in this work.