3 research outputs found
Relative Abundances of Cosmic Ray Nuclei B-C-N-O in the Energy Region from 10 GeV/n to 300 GeV/n. Results from the Science Flight of the ATIC
The ATIC balloon-borne experiment measures the energy spectra of elements from H to Fe in primary cosmic rays from about 100 GeV to 100 TeV. ATIC is comprised of a fully active bismuth germanate calorimeter, a carbon target with embedded scintillator hodoscopes, and a silicon matrix that is used as a main charge detector. The silicon matrix produces good charge resolution for the protons and helium but only a partial resolution for heavier nuclei. In the present paper a charge resolution of ATIC device was essentially improved and backgrounds were reduced in the region from Be to Si by means of the upper layer of the scintillator hodoscope that was used as an additional charge detector together with the silicon matrix. The flux ratios of nuclei B/C, O/C, N/C in the energy region from about 10 GeV/nucleon to 300 GeV/nucleon that were obtained from new high-resolution and high-quality charge spectra of nuclei are presented. The results are compared with existing theoretical predictions
Energy Spectra of Abundant Nuclei of Primary Cosmic Rays from the Data of ATIC-2 Experiment: Final Results
The final results of processing the data from the balloon-born experiment
ATIC-2 (Antarctica, 2002-2003) for the energy spectra of protons and He, C, O,
Ne, Mg, Si, and Fe nuclei, the spectrum of all particles, and the mean
logarithm of atomic weight of primary cosmic rays as a function of energy are
presented. The final results are based on improvement of the methods used
earlier, in particular, considerably increased resolution of the charge
spectrum. The preliminary conclusions on the significant difference in the
spectra of protons and helium nuclei (the proton spectrum is steeper) and the
non-power character of the spectra of protons and heavier nuclei (flattening of
carbon spectrum at energies above 10 TeV) are confirmed. A complex structure of
the energy dependence of the mean logarithm of atomic weight is found.Comment: 4 pages, a paper for 30th Russian Cosmic Ray Conference (2008, St.
Petersburg