220 research outputs found
On the influence of the heliomagnetospheric periphery on the galactic cosmic rays
The suggestion is substantiated that the periphery of the heliomagnetosphere, the region in which properties depend on both solar wind and interstellar space parameters, plays a much more important role in the solar modulation of galactic cosmic rays than previously believed
Solar cosmic ray bursts and solar neutrino fluxes
The neutrino flux detected in the C1-Ar experiment seems to respond to the powerful solar cosmic ray bursts. The ground-based detectors, the balloons and the satellites detect about 50% of the bursts of soalr cosmic ray generated on the Sun's visible side. As a rule, such bursts originate from the Western side of the visible solar disk. Since the solar cosmic ray bursts are in opposite phase withthe 11-year galactic cosmic ray cycle which also seems to be reflected by neutrino experiment. The neutrino generation in the bursts will flatten the possible 11-year behavior of the AR-37 production rate, Q, in the Cl-Ar experiment. The detection of solar-flare-generated gamma-quanta with energies above tens of Mev is indicative of the generation of high-energy particles which in turn may produce neutrinos. Thus, the increased Q during the runs, when the flare-generated high energy gamma-quanta have been registered, may be regarded as additional evidence for neutrino geneation in the solar flare processes
The difference in the energy spectra of galactic cosmic rays at the minima of the 19th and 20th solar activity cycles
The absorption curves of the cosmic ray charged component for solar minima in 1965 and 1975 to 1977 are analyzed on the basis of daily stratospheric measurements in Murmansk, Moscow, Alma-Ata and Mirny (Antarctic). Two distinct features in the energy spectra of galactic cosmic rays are revealed during these periods. At the 20th solar activity minimum there was the additional short range component of cosmic rays. Additional fluxes in the stratosphere at high latitudes caused by this component are probably protons and He nuclei with the energy 100 to 500 MeV/n. The fluxes are estimates as Approx. 300 sq m/s/sr. At the minimum in 1975 to 1977 the proton intensity in the energy range 1 to 15 GeV is 10 to 15% lower than that in the 1965 solar activity minimum
Ionization in the atmosphere, comparison between measurements and simulations
A survey of the data on measured particle fluxes and the rate of ionization
in the atmosphere is presented. Measurements as a function of altitude, time
and cut-off rigidity are compared with simulations of particle production from
cosmic rays. The simulations generally give a reasonable representation of the
data. However, some discrepancies are found. The solar modulation of the
particle fluxes is measured and found to be a factor 2.70.8 greater than
that observed for muons alone near sea level.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysics and Space Science
Transactions. Typographical errors fixe
Solar activity and the mean global temperature
The variation with time from 1956-2002 of the globally averaged rate of
ionization produced by cosmic rays in the atmosphere is deduced and shown to
have a cyclic component of period roughly twice the 11 year solar cycle period.
Long term variations in the global average surface temperature as a function of
time since 1956 are found to have a similar cyclic component. The cyclic
variations are also observed in the solar irradiance and in the mean daily sun
spot number. The cyclic variation in the cosmic ray rate is observed to be
delayed by 2-4 years relative to the temperature, the solar irradiance and
daily sun spot variations suggesting that the origin of the correlation is more
likely to be direct solar activity than cosmic rays. Assuming that the
correlation is caused by such solar activity, we deduce that the maximum recent
increase in the mean surface temperature of the Earth which can be ascribed to
this activity is of the observed global warming.Comment: Accepted for publication in Environmental Research Letter
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
Trapped proton fluxes at low Earth orbits measured by the PAMELA experiment
We report an accurate measurement of the geomagnetically trapped proton
fluxes for kinetic energy above > 70 MeV performed by the PAMELA mission at low
Earth orbits (350-610 km). Data were analyzed in the frame of the adiabatic
theory of charged particle motion in the geomagnetic field. Flux properties
were investigated in detail, providing a full characterization of the particle
radiation in the South Atlantic Anomaly region, including locations, energy
spectra and pitch angle distributions. PAMELA results significantly improve the
description of the Earth's radiation environment at low altitudes placing
important constraints on the trapping and interaction processes, and can be
used to validate current trapped particle radiation models.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figure
Measurement of boron and carbon fluxes in cosmic rays with the PAMELA experiment
The propagation of cosmic rays inside our galaxy plays a fundamental role in
shaping their injection spectra into those observed at Earth. One of the best
tools to investigate this issue is the ratio of fluxes for secondary and
primary species. The boron-to-carbon (B/C) ratio, in particular, is a sensitive
probe to investigate propagation mechanisms. This paper presents new
measurements of the absolute fluxes of boron and carbon nuclei, as well as the
B/C ratio, from the PAMELA space experiment. The results span the range 0.44 -
129 GeV/n in kinetic energy for data taken in the period July 2006 - March
2008
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
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
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