4,688 research outputs found

    Cosmic ray telescope for OGO 2 and 4 spacecraft

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    The construction and subsequent flight are described of a cosmic ray telescope aboard the OGO-2 and 4 Spacecraft. This instrument was a combination Cerekov-scintillation counter telescope designed to measure the cosmic ray energy spectrum from 1-15 GV and charge composition from Z=1-8. OGO-2 was launched in October 1965; however, attitude control problems caused a rapid loss of control gas, so that after approximately 2 weeks it was no longer possible to point the spacecraft. This mission was officially declared a failure. The cosmic ray instrument appeared to work well during this time. OGO-4 was launched in July 1967, with a similar telescope aboard. It operated successfully approximately one year. The details of the experiment, its operation, and the results are given

    Polarization Effects in Standard Model Parton Distributions at Very High Energies

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    We update the earlier work of Refs. arXiv:1703.08562 and arXiv:1712.07147 on parton distribution functions in the full Standard Model to include gauge boson polarization, non-zero input electroweak boson PDFs and next-to-leading-order resummation of large logarithms.Comment: 24 pages, 7 Figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1703.08562, arXiv:1806.1015

    Temporal variations of the anomalous oxygen component

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    Data from the cosmic ray experiment on Voyagers 1 and 2 was used to examine anomalous oxygen in the time period from launch in 1977 to the end of 1981. Several time periods were found where large periodic (typically 26 day) temporal variations of the oxygen intensity between approximately 5 - 15 MeV/nuc are present. Variations in intensity by up to a factor of 10 are observed during these periods. Several characteristics of these variations indicate that they are not higher energy extensions of the low energy particle (approximately 1 MeV/nuc) increases found in many corotating interaction regions (CIR's). Many of these periodic temporal variations are correlated with similar, but much smaller, recurrent variations in the 75 MeV proton rate. Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 counting rates were compared to estimate the local radial gradient for both the protons and the oxygen. The proton gradients during periods of both maximum and minumum fluxes are consistent with the overall positive radial gradients reported by others from Pioneer and near-Earth observations, supporting the view that these variations are due to local modulation of a source outside the radial range of project measurements. In contrast, the oxygen gradients during periods of maximum proton flux differ in sign from those during minimum proton fluxes, suggesting that the origin of the oxygen variations is different from that of the protons
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