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Unique Properties of Cosmic Rays: Results from the Alpha Magnetic spectrometer

We report the properties of cosmic ray nuclei from protons to nickel (Z=1–14, 16, 26, and 28) in the rigidity range from 2 GV to 3 TV collected by the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer on the International Space Station from May 19, 2011 to May 6, 2021. We found that the primary cosmic rays He-C-O-Fe-Ni,...

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Autores principales: Choutko, Vitali, Yan, Qi
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.22323/1.423.0012
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2862854
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author Choutko, Vitali
Yan, Qi
author_facet Choutko, Vitali
Yan, Qi
author_sort Choutko, Vitali
collection CERN
description We report the properties of cosmic ray nuclei from protons to nickel (Z=1–14, 16, 26, and 28) in the rigidity range from 2 GV to 3 TV collected by the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer on the International Space Station from May 19, 2011 to May 6, 2021. We found that the primary cosmic rays He-C-O-Fe-Ni, and Ne-Mg-Si-S belong to two different classes of cosmic rays. We also found that the secondary cosmic rays Li-Be-B and F belong to another two different classes of cosmic rays.The rigidity dependences of the secondary cosmic rays and the primary cosmic rays are distinctly different. In particular, above ∼ 200 GV the secondary cosmic rays harden twice as much as the primary cosmic rays. The third group of cosmic rays N, Na, and Al can be described as linear combinations of primary (O, Si) and secondary (B, F) cosmic rays. Compared with O and Si, the primary cosmic rays C, Ne, Mg, and S were found to have secondary component, similar to N, Na, and Al. As a result, the C/O, N/O, Ne/Si, Na/Si, Al/Si, Mg/Si, and S/Si abundance ratios at the source are directly determined independent of cosmic ray propagation. Finally, we found that the lightest and most abundant primary proton cosmic rays have two components, the first being with the same rigidity dependence as He-C-O-Fe-Ni and the second with rigidity spectral index softer than the first one by Δ𝑝/𝐻𝑒 = 0.30 ± 0.01.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
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publishDate 2023
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spelling cern-28628542023-06-28T13:34:37Zdoi:10.22323/1.423.0012http://cds.cern.ch/record/2862854engChoutko, VitaliYan, QiUnique Properties of Cosmic Rays: Results from the Alpha Magnetic spectrometerAstrophysics and AstronomyParticle Physics - ExperimentNuclear Physics - ExperimentWe report the properties of cosmic ray nuclei from protons to nickel (Z=1–14, 16, 26, and 28) in the rigidity range from 2 GV to 3 TV collected by the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer on the International Space Station from May 19, 2011 to May 6, 2021. We found that the primary cosmic rays He-C-O-Fe-Ni, and Ne-Mg-Si-S belong to two different classes of cosmic rays. We also found that the secondary cosmic rays Li-Be-B and F belong to another two different classes of cosmic rays.The rigidity dependences of the secondary cosmic rays and the primary cosmic rays are distinctly different. In particular, above ∼ 200 GV the secondary cosmic rays harden twice as much as the primary cosmic rays. The third group of cosmic rays N, Na, and Al can be described as linear combinations of primary (O, Si) and secondary (B, F) cosmic rays. Compared with O and Si, the primary cosmic rays C, Ne, Mg, and S were found to have secondary component, similar to N, Na, and Al. As a result, the C/O, N/O, Ne/Si, Na/Si, Al/Si, Mg/Si, and S/Si abundance ratios at the source are directly determined independent of cosmic ray propagation. Finally, we found that the lightest and most abundant primary proton cosmic rays have two components, the first being with the same rigidity dependence as He-C-O-Fe-Ni and the second with rigidity spectral index softer than the first one by Δ𝑝/𝐻𝑒 = 0.30 ± 0.01.We report the properties of cosmic ray nuclei from protons to nickel (Z=1–14, 16, 26, and 28) in the rigidity range from 2 GV to 3 TV collected by the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer on the International Space Station from May 19, 2011 to May 6, 2021. We found that the primary cosmic rays He-C-O-Fe-Ni, and Ne-Mg-Si-S belong to two different classes of cosmic rays. We also found that the secondary cosmic rays Li-Be-B and F belong to another two different classes of cosmic rays.The rigidity dependences of the secondary cosmic rays and the primary cosmic rays are distinctly different. In particular, above ∼ 200 GV the secondary cosmic rays harden twice as much as the primary cosmic rays. The third group of cosmic rays N, Na, and Al can be described as linear combinations of primary (O, Si) and secondary (B, F) cosmic rays. Compared with O and Si, the primary cosmic rays C, Ne, Mg, and S were found to have secondary component, similar to N, Na, and Al. As a result, the C/O, N/O, Ne/Si, Na/Si, Al/Si, Mg/Si, and S/Si abundance ratios at the source are directly determined independent of cosmic ray propagation. Finally, we found that the lightest and most abundant primary proton cosmic rays have two components, the first being with the same rigidity dependence as He-C-O-Fe-Ni and the second with rigidity spectral index softer than the first one by Δ𝑝/𝐻𝑒 = 0.30 ± 0.01.oai:cds.cern.ch:28628542023
spellingShingle Astrophysics and Astronomy
Particle Physics - Experiment
Nuclear Physics - Experiment
Choutko, Vitali
Yan, Qi
Unique Properties of Cosmic Rays: Results from the Alpha Magnetic spectrometer
title Unique Properties of Cosmic Rays: Results from the Alpha Magnetic spectrometer
title_full Unique Properties of Cosmic Rays: Results from the Alpha Magnetic spectrometer
title_fullStr Unique Properties of Cosmic Rays: Results from the Alpha Magnetic spectrometer
title_full_unstemmed Unique Properties of Cosmic Rays: Results from the Alpha Magnetic spectrometer
title_short Unique Properties of Cosmic Rays: Results from the Alpha Magnetic spectrometer
title_sort unique properties of cosmic rays: results from the alpha magnetic spectrometer
topic Astrophysics and Astronomy
Particle Physics - Experiment
Nuclear Physics - Experiment
url https://dx.doi.org/10.22323/1.423.0012
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2862854
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