We report abundances of elements from 26Fe to 40Zr in the cosmic
radiation measured by the SuperTIGER (Trans-Iron Galactic Element Recorder)
instrument during 55 days of exposure on a long-duration balloon flight over
Antarctica. These observations resolve elemental abundances in this charge
range with single-element resolution and good statistics.
These results support a model of cosmic-ray origin in which the source
material consists of a mixture of 19−6+11\% material from massive stars
and ∼81\% normal interstellar medium (ISM) material with solar system
abundances. The results also show a preferential acceleration of refractory
elements (found in interstellar dust grains) by a factor of ∼4 over
volatile elements (found in interstellar gas) ordered by atomic mass (A). Both
the refractory and volatile elements show a mass-dependent enhancement with
similar slopes.Comment: 9 pages, 12 figures, 2 tables, accepted by Ap