499 research outputs found
Community participation in the provision of basic health services : the case of the Hanunuo Mangyans of oriental Mindoro, Philippines; final report
Madison, Wisconsin, June 25th 1863.Dear [illegible] Boise, Allow me to introduce to you, the [illegible], Mr. John Muir, a most estimable young gentleman, who had been attending the state University here, & expects to commence study in A[illegible] [illegible] next term. You will find in him the greatest modesty [found?] with high moral & religious ex- cellence. He had also marked mechanical genius. I trust his time of study in your University may be pleasant & profitable. My family joins me in regards to you & yours Fr[illegible]matly yours J E. Johnson.06078https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmcl/43539/thumbnail.jp
The GAPS Experiment to Search for Dark Matter using Low-energy Antimatter
The GAPS experiment is designed to carry out a sensitive dark matter search
by measuring low-energy cosmic ray antideuterons and antiprotons. GAPS will
provide a new avenue to access a wide range of dark matter models and masses
that is complementary to direct detection techniques, collider experiments and
other indirect detection techniques. Well-motivated theories beyond the
Standard Model contain viable dark matter candidates which could lead to a
detectable signal of antideuterons resulting from the annihilation or decay of
dark matter particles. The dark matter contribution to the antideuteron flux is
believed to be especially large at low energies (E < 1 GeV), where the
predicted flux from conventional astrophysical sources (i.e. from secondary
interactions of cosmic rays) is very low. The GAPS low-energy antiproton search
will provide stringent constraints on less than 10 GeV dark matter, will
provide the best limits on primordial black hole evaporation on Galactic length
scales, and will explore new discovery space in cosmic ray physics.
Unlike other antimatter search experiments such as BESS and AMS that use
magnetic spectrometers, GAPS detects antideuterons and antiprotons using an
exotic atom technique. This technique, and its unique event topology, will give
GAPS a nearly background-free detection capability that is critical in a
rare-event search. GAPS is designed to carry out its science program using
long-duration balloon flights in Antarctica. A prototype instrument was
successfully flown from Taiki, Japan in 2012. GAPS has now been approved by
NASA to proceed towards the full science instrument, with the possibility of a
first long-duration balloon flight in late 2020. Here we motivate low-energy
cosmic ray antimatter searches and discuss the current status of the GAPS
experiment and the design of the payload.Comment: 8 pags, 3 figures, Proc. 35th International Cosmic Ray Conference
(ICRC 2017), Busan, Kore
A new measurement of the antiproton-to-proton flux ratio up to 100 GeV in the cosmic radiation
A new measurement of the cosmic ray antiproton-to-proton flux ratio between 1
and 100 GeV is presented. The results were obtained with the PAMELA experiment,
which was launched into low-earth orbit on-board the Resurs-DK1 satellite on
June 15th 2006. During 500 days of data collection a total of about 1000
antiprotons have been identified, including 100 above an energy of 20 GeV. The
high-energy results are a ten-fold improvement in statistics with respect to
all previously published data. The data follow the trend expected from
secondary production calculations and significantly constrain contributions
from exotic sources, e.g. dark matter particle annihilations.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
Time dependence of the electron and positron components of the cosmic radiation measured by the PAMELA experiment between July 2006 and December 2015
Cosmic-ray electrons and positrons are a unique probe of the propagation of
cosmic rays as well as of the nature and distribution of particle sources in
our Galaxy. Recent measurements of these particles are challenging our basic
understanding of the mechanisms of production, acceleration and propagation of
cosmic rays. Particularly striking are the differences between the low energy
results collected by the space-borne PAMELA and AMS-02 experiments and older
measurements pointing to sign-charge dependence of the solar modulation of
cosmic-ray spectra. The PAMELA experiment has been measuring the time variation
of the positron and electron intensity at Earth from July 2006 to December 2015
covering the period for the minimum of solar cycle 23 (2006-2009) till the
middle of the maximum of solar cycle 24, through the polarity reversal of the
heliospheric magnetic field which took place between 2013 and 2014. The
positron to electron ratio measured in this time period clearly shows a
sign-charge dependence of the solar modulation introduced by particle drifts.
These results provide the first clear and continuous observation of how drift
effects on solar modulation have unfolded with time from solar minimum to solar
maximum and their dependence on the particle rigidity and the cyclic polarity
of the solar magnetic field.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
Time dependence of the e^- flux measured by PAMELA during the July 2006 - December 2009 solar minimum
Precision measurements of the electron component in the cosmic radiation
provide important information about the origin and propagation of cosmic rays
in the Galaxy not accessible from the study of the cosmic-ray nuclear
components due to their differing diffusion and energy-loss processes. However,
when measured near Earth, the effects of propagation and modulation of galactic
cosmic rays in the heliosphere, particularly significant for energies up to at
least 30 GeV, must be properly taken into account. In this paper the electron
(e^-) spectra measured by PAMELA down to 70 MeV from July 2006 to December 2009
over six-months time intervals are presented. Fluxes are compared with a
state-of-the-art three-dimensional model of solar modulation that reproduces
the observations remarkably well.Comment: 40 pages, 18 figures, 1 tabl
Search for anisotropies in cosmic-ray positrons detected by the PAMELA experiment
The PAMELA detector was launched on board of the Russian Resurs-DK1 satellite
on June 15, 2006. Data collected during the first four years have been used to
search for large-scale anisotropies in the arrival directions of cosmic-ray
positrons. The PAMELA experiment allows for a full sky investigation, with
sensitivity to global anisotropies in any angular window of the celestial
sphere. Data samples of positrons in the rigidity range 10 GV R
200 GV were analyzed. This article discusses the method and the results of the
search for possible local sources through analysis of anisotropy in positron
data compared to the proton background. The resulting distributions of arrival
directions are found to be isotropic. Starting from the angular power spectrum,
a dipole anisotropy upper limit \delta = 0.166 at 95% C.L. is determined.
Additional search is carried out around the Sun. No evidence of an excess
correlated with that direction was found.Comment: The value of the dipole anisotropy upper limit has been changed. The
method is correct but there was a miscalculation in the relative formul
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