The composition of galactic cosmic rays
- 15 May 1968
- journal article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Physics
- Vol. 46 (10) , S544-S547
- https://doi.org/10.1139/p68-292
Abstract
Recent measurements of low-energy galactic cosmic rays obtained on sounding rockets and satellites exhibit a composition different from that obtained for intermediate and high-energy radiation obtained at balloon altitudes. In particular the ratio of light to medium nuclei is observed to be 0.2–0.3 in the 50–100 MeV/nucleon interval as compared with values near 0.5 in the 200–500 MeV/nucleon region. Lower values of the ratios C/O, N/O, F/O, and odd-Z/even-Z are also found. In the light of these new measurements and of new measurements on the fragmentation cross sections for cosmic-ray nuclei in interstellar space, an attempt has been made to calculate the composition expected if similar source spectra are assumed. It is found that neither passage through a fixed amount of material nor an equilibrium condition (exponential path-length distribution) is adequate to explain the observed features. The effects of including other mechanisms such as rigidity-dependent escape from the galaxy and Fermi acceleration in interstellar space are evaluated.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cross Section for Formation ofby 20-155-MeV Proton-Induced Reactions in CarbonPhysical Review B, 1967
- Source Spectra and Composition of Cosmic Rays Implied by an Analysis of Interstellar and Interplanetary TravelPhysical Review B, 1966
- Mass-spectrometric determination of Li6 and Li7 production in C12 and O16 by high energy protonsPhysics Letters, 1965
- The Production of Radio Isotopes in Collisions of Cosmic Ray Nuclei with Hydrogen in Space and the Effect of Their Decay on the Composition of the Radiation Observed near the EarthProgress of Theoretical Physics, 1962
- On the Origin of the Cosmic RadiationPhysical Review B, 1949