Research at IAP

Research of the Institute for Astroparticle Physics (IAP) addresses fundamental puzzles of nature at the frontiers of science, where cosmology, astrophysics, and elementary particle physics meet. In collaboration with international research institutions, the IAP conducts fundamental experimental research in the fields of particle and astroparticle physics.

Read more about our working groups and the large international experiments which examine the nature and origin of cosmic rays, properties of neutrinos, and the composition of dark matter.

 

The KATRIN Experiment at KIT

KATRIN intends to determine directly the mass of the electron neutrino or set a new upper limit as low as 0.2 eV/c2 by measuring precisely the shape of the β spectrum from tritium decay near the endpoint. The current upper llimit is 2.3 eV/c2 KATRIN is located at the Karlsruhe Tritium Laboratory by an international collaboration including four KIT institutes. IAP is responsible for the spectrometers und takes part in several other tasks in KATRIN.

The Tritium Laboratory Karlsruhe (TLK) at KIT

In the beginning of the nineties, the Tritium Laboratory Karlsruhe (TLK) was founded with the aim to develop tritium technologies for the fuel cycle of fusion reactors. TLK is a unique semi-technical scale facility within Europe and America with its license to operate 40 g (equals 1.5·1016 Bq) tritium, 100 kg depleted uranium, and krypton plus rubidium as calibration sources. Within its total experimental area of more than 1100 m2, there are more than 20 glove box systems securing and containing a total volume of about 160 m3 for tritium experiments. Nowadays the main focus of the TLK is the tritium operation for KATRIN together with its associated R&D projects.

The Pierre Auger Observatory at Malargüe, Argentina

At the world’s largest air shower experiment, the Pierre-Auger-Observatorium IAP is involved in designing and building the fluorescence telescopes and the electronics for data taking and triggering. The telescopes detect showers of the highest energies directly by their fluorescense radiation. The muon component is measured at ground level by 1600 water-filled detector tanks distributed over the whole Auger site of about 3000 km2.

The IceCube Observatory at the South Pole

IceCube is the neutrino observatory located at the South Pole consisting of optical modules within a cubic kilometer of Antarctic ice. Neutrinos, as almost elusive particles, are great cosmic messengers possibly pointing to the extreme astrophysical sources and giving insight to processes involved in creating highest energy particles. In addition, IceCube has the surface detector IceTop for cosmic rays. Our group at KIT is mainly working on the upgrade of IceTop and the next generation of the IceCube experiment, IceCube-Gen2.
The ERC project PeV-Radio is an extension of IceTop with radio antennas.

Direct Search for Dark Matter

Dark matter particles should scatter on known particles such as atomic nuclei. In such extremely rare processes, only very small signals are expected. Thus, special target materials such as ultrapure liquid xenon (XENONnT, DARWIN) or cryogenic germanium crystals (EDELWEISS) are used in direct DM search experiments. IAP is involved in the design, construction and running of dedicated searches, including data acquisition and analyses.

Theoretical Astroparticle Physics

Astroparticle physics is the union of elementary particle physics with cosmology and astrophysics. We search for new fundamental physics and try to understand our Universe by investigating the interplay of physics at the very smallest and very largest length scales. The group Theoretical Astroparticle Physics at IAP considers various aspects of neutrino physics as well as the problem of Dark Matter in the Universe. We work mostly on the phenomenology of theoretical models and the interpretation of data.

Theoretical Particle Physics

The group Theoretical Particle Physics at IAP is engaged with various aspects of particle physics both in and beyond the Standard Model. In our research, we investigate models of New Physics and their phenomenology in the fields of collider physics, Higgs physics, flavour physics, and Dark Matter. In addition we perform precision calculations for predictions of the Standard Model which are necessary to unambiguoulsy identify even small deviations from the Standard Model.

FUNK – Search for hidden-­photon dark matter

The FUNK Experiment searches for dark matter in the hidden-photon sector using a large spherical mirror with an area of more than 14 m2, probing for dark matter candidates with masses in the eV and sub-eV energy range. FUNK is located at the KIT and re-uses mirror segments developed for the Pierre Auger Observatory.

The Tunka Radio Extension (Tunka-Rex) in Sibiria

Tunka-Rex is an array of radio antennas at the Tunka observatory in Siberia close to Lake Baikal. The primary goal of Tunka-Rex is the further development of the radio technique for the measurement of high-energy cosmic rays. Therefore, we performed a cross-calibration to the established Cherenkov-light technique. The IAP holds the leading role in Tunka-Rex, one of five detector systems of the Tunka Advanced Instrument for cosmic ray physics and Gamma Astronomy (TAIGA).

CORSIKA

CORSIKA is a detailed Monte Carlo program to study the evolution and properties of extensive air showers in the atmosphere. While CORSIKA was originally designed in 1989 for the KASCADE experiment it developed to THE standard simulation tool for all experiments dealing with extensive air showers induced by energetic cosmic rays, gamma rays or neutrinos.

KASCADE Cosmic-Ray Data Centre (KCDC)

KCDC is an "open data" portal to provide the data of air show events measured by the KASCADE and KASCADE-Grande experiments to a broad public. KCDC provides access to more than 430 million events measured by the KASCADE / KASCADE Grande arrays and hadron central calorimeter. The data set of an event consists of 24 observables, which include reconstructed shower properties such as for example, the number of charged particles at ground level as well as metadata like the event time. Data arrays such as deposited energy and arrival times of the particles for each individual detector station are also available in the data shop.

 

 

The following experiments have been completed in the past

KASCADE at KIT

KASCADE (KArlsruhe Shower Core and Array DEtector) was an extensive air shower experiment array to study the cosmic ray primary composition and the hadronic interactions in the energy range E0=1014-1018eV. It was situated on site of KIT-Campus North, the former Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe, and measured simultaneously the electromagnetic, muonic and hadronic components of extensive air showers of high energetic cosmic rays between 1996 and 2013.
KASCADE-Grande is the extension of the original KASCADE experiment, and recorded data in the years 2003 to 2013. Since 2013, the KASCADE data have been made accessible to a broader public via the 'KASCADE Cosmic Ray Data Centre' (KCDC).

Neutrino Experiment KARMEN

The German British experiment KARMEN (Karlsruhe Rutherford Mittel-Energie Neutrino) at the Rutherford Laboratory near Oxford, performed with a leading contribution from Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe, came to an end on July 20th 2001. KARMEN investigated the nature of neutrinos and focussed on two research subjects: The investigation of neutrino-nucleus interactions and the search for neutrino oscillations. For that purpose, KARMEN used an intensive source of neutrinos provided by the ISIS neutron spallation source. Neutrinos were detected in a 56t segmented scintillation calorimeter which was surrounded by 7000t of steel.