4,504 research outputs found

    United States Records of Williamsonia Fletcheri (Odonata: Corduliidae)

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    Excerpt: Foley (1966) reported specimens of Williamsonia fletcheri Williamson from rand Traverse County, Michigan as the first record of the species from the lower peninsula and the second for the United States. However. two other records for the United States were overlooked and this was actually the fourt

    Doctor\u27s Bill for Rose Cornell, September 25, 1935

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    Bill for Dr. H. G. Beatty, paid $50 in cash by Rose Cornell.https://digitalcommons.otterbein.edu/cornell_ephemera/1134/thumbnail.jp

    Circulation and oceanographic properties in the Somali Basin as observed during the 1979 southwest monsoon

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    Report on technical oceanographic data collected in the Somali Basin during the 1979 southwest monsoon.Warbixinno ku saabsan xog farsameed ee ku saabsan badda oo laga soo aruuriyay biyagaleenka soomaaliyeed, xilliga maansuunka koofur-galbeed ee sannadka 1979.Rapporto sui dati tecnici oceanografici raccolti nel bacino della Somalia durante il monsone sudoccidentale del 1979.Link: http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/bibliography/46902#/summar

    Maurice Aaron Kibel

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    Elemental energy spectra of cosmic rays measured by CREAM-II

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    We present new measurements of the energy spectra of cosmic-ray (CR) nuclei from the second flight of the balloon-borne experiment CREAM (Cosmic Ray Energetics And Mass). The instrument (CREAM-II) was comprised of detectors based on different techniques (Cherenkov light, specific ionization in scintillators and silicon sensors) to provide a redundant charge identification and a thin ionization calorimeter capable of measuring the energy of cosmic rays up to several hundreds of TeV. The data analysis is described and the individual energy spectra of C, O, Ne, Mg, Si and Fe are reported up to ~ 10^14 eV. The spectral shape looks nearly the same for all the primary elements and can be expressed as a power law in energy E^{-2.66+/-0.04}. The nitrogen absolute intensity in the energy range 100-800 GeV/n is also measured.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, presented at ICRC 2009, Lodz, Polan

    Measurements of cosmic-ray energy spectra with the 2nd CREAM flight

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    During its second Antarctic flight, the CREAM (Cosmic Ray Energetics And Mass) balloon experiment collected data for 28 days, measuring the charge and the energy of cosmic rays (CR) with a redundant system of particle identification and an imaging thin ionization calorimeter. Preliminary direct measurements of the absolute intensities of individual CR nuclei are reported in the elemental range from carbon to iron at very high energy.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, presented at XV International Symposium on Very High Energy Cosmic Ray Interactions (ISVHECRI 2008

    Planning the Future of U.S. Particle Physics (Snowmass 2013): Chapter 4: Cosmic Frontier

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    These reports present the results of the 2013 Community Summer Study of the APS Division of Particles and Fields ("Snowmass 2013") on the future program of particle physics in the U.S. Chapter 4, on the Cosmic Frontier, discusses the program of research relevant to cosmology and the early universe. This area includes the study of dark matter and the search for its particle nature, the study of dark energy and inflation, and cosmic probes of fundamental symmetries.Comment: 61 page

    Energy Spectra, Altitude Profiles and Charge Ratios of Atmospheric Muons

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    We present a new measurement of air shower muons made during atmospheric ascent of the High Energy Antimatter Telescope balloon experiment. The muon charge ratio mu+ / mu- is presented as a function of atmospheric depth in the momentum interval 0.3-0.9 GeV/c. The differential mu- momentum spectra are presented between 0.3 and about 50 GeV/c at atmospheric depths between 13 and 960 g/cm^2. We compare our measurements with other recent data and with Monte Carlo calculations of the same type as those used in predicting atmospheric neutrino fluxes. We find that our measured mu- fluxes are smaller than the predictions by as much as 70% at shallow atmospheric depths, by about 20% at the depth of shower maximum, and are in good agreement with the predictions at greater depths. We explore the consequences of this on the question of atmospheric neutrino production.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. D (2000
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