scholarly journals Measurement of Nuclear Fragmentation Cross Sections with NA61/SHINE for a better understanding of the Propagation of Cosmic-Ray Nuclei in the Galaxy

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neeraj Amin
1991 ◽  
Vol 69 (12) ◽  
pp. 1481-1486
Author(s):  
M. J. Pantazopoulou ◽  
A. F. Barghouty ◽  
R. A. Witt

A statistical nuclear-fragmentation model is used to calculate the total inclusive cross sections and yield ratios of light fragments (p, d, 3H, and 3He) from 800 MeV/nucleon mass-symmetric and mass-asymmetric collision systems. Comparison with available data reveal good correspondence between the observed total cross sections and fragment-yield ratios, and the calculated ones. The model is also used to calculate the 4He/3He ratio from CNO + CNO collisions at 1 GeV/nucleon. Averaging over the mass numberof the CNO collision system, we calculate a ratio of 5.76 ± 0.52 ± 12%. A mass-independent thermal-model formula gives a ratio of only ≈ 1.5. The appreciable calculated production of 4He relative to 3He, as fragmentation products in atmospheric CNO collisions with 1 GeV/nucleon cosmic-ray primary CNO nuclei, has important implications for studies of atmospheric secondaries as background sources for space-based and balloon-borne light-fragment observations.


O f the nuclear cosmic rays arriving in the vicinity of Earth from interstellar space, more than 90% have energies less than 1010 eV /u.f Some effects of their modulation (including deceleration) in the Solar System are briefly discussed. The origin of particles at energies < 107 eV/u is still obscure. They could be due to stellar explosions or to solar emissions, or perhaps to interaction of interstellar gas with the solar wind. Between 108 and 1010 eV/u, the composition appears constant to ca. 30% within the statistics of available data. Cosmic rays traverse a mean path length of 6 g/cm 2 in a medium assumed to contain nine hydrogen atoms for each helium atom. Spallation reactions occurring in this medium result in enhancement of many cosmic-ray elements that are more scarce in the general abundances by several orders of magnitude. Cosmic-ray dwell time in the Galaxy seems to be < 107 years. The source composition of cosmic rays has been derived for elements with atomic numbers 1 ≤ Z ≤ 26. A comparison with abundances in the Solar System implies that the latter is richer in hydrogen and helium by a factor of ca. 20, in N and O by ca. 5, and in C by a factor of ca.2. Possible interpretations invoke (a) nucleosynthesis of cosmic rays in certain sources, e.g. supernovae, or (b) models of selective injection that depend, e.g. on ionization potentials or ionization cross sections. Calculated isotopic abundances of arriving cosmic rays are compared with the observed values now becoming available, and found to be in general agreement. Recent progress in probing the composition and spectrum of ultra-heavy nuclei is outlined.


1968 ◽  
Vol 46 (10) ◽  
pp. S561-S568 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. M. Shapiro ◽  
R. Silberberg

Previous investigations by Daniel and Durgaprasad on the ratios Be/B and Be/Li in the primary cosmic radiation exploited the decay of 10Be produced in space to deduce a confinement time for cosmic rays in the galaxy. They concluded that this "age" T is at least 50 million years, and thence inferred that the cosmic-ray nuclei are trapped in a volume much larger than that of the galactic disk. These conclusions depended upon the values of fragmentation cross sections available in 1962 to Badhwar, Daniel, and Vijayalakshmi. Recent values of the Orsay group, however, reduce the calculated rates of 10Be and 9Be production by an order of magnitude; and an analysis based upon the latest cross sections leads to the following conclusions: (1) The possibility that cosmic rays are mainly confined to the disk of the galaxy and that T ≈ 106 years is not excluded. (2) The fragmentation parameter for medium nuclei [Formula: see text] into light nuclei [Formula: see text] is revised from 0.48 (the value of Badhwar et al.) to 0.34. (3) The mean path-length of 2.5 ± 0.5 g/cm2 of Badhwar et al. is revised to 4 ± 1 g/cm2. (4) 7Be now appears to be the principal component of cosmic-ray beryllium (about 70 or 80%, depending upon the cosmic-ray lifetime).


1968 ◽  
Vol 46 (10) ◽  
pp. S627-S632 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Ramaty ◽  
R. E. Lingenfelter

Assuming that cosmic-ray deuterons and helium-3 nuclei are of secondary origin, we show that a unique determination of both the cosmic-ray path-length and the residual interplanetary field modulation at solar minimum may be made from a comparison of the calculated and measured intensities of these two nuclei. This determination does not depend on any assumptions regarding either the source spectra or the unmodulated proton to alpha particle ratio of the primary cosmic rays. The production of deuterium and helium-3 by cosmic-ray interactions in the galaxy is calculated considering energy-dependent cross sections, interaction kinematics, and demodulated cosmic-ray spectra. The resulting flux at the earth is obtained by taking into account leakage from the galaxy, ionization losses, nuclear breakup, and modulation. From a comparison of these calculations with the measured deuterium and helium-3 intensities at the earth, we conclude that within the experimental uncertainties all the data can be understood in terms of an energy-independent cosmic-ray path-length of 4 ± 1 g/cm2 and a residual interplanetary field modulation at solar minimum of the form exp(–η/Pβ) with η = 0.4 ± 0.1 BV, where P and β are the rigidity and velocity.


1968 ◽  
Vol 46 (10) ◽  
pp. S544-S547 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. V. Reames ◽  
C. E. Fichtel

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.


1970 ◽  
Vol 39 ◽  
pp. 168-183
Author(s):  
E. N. Parker

The topic of this presentation is the origin and dynamical behavior of the magnetic field and cosmic-ray gas in the disk of the Galaxy. In the space available I can do no more than mention the ideas that have been developed, with but little explanation and discussion. To make up for this inadequacy I have tried to give a complete list of references in the written text, so that the interested reader can pursue the points in depth (in particular see the review articles Parker, 1968a, 1969a, 1970). My purpose here is twofold, to outline for you the calculations and ideas that have developed thus far, and to indicate the uncertainties that remain. The basic ideas are sound, I think, but, when we come to the details, there are so many theoretical alternatives that need yet to be explored and so much that is not yet made clear by observations.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pedro De la Torre Luque ◽  
M. Nicola Mazziotta ◽  
Fabio Gargano ◽  
Francesco Loparco ◽  
Davide Serini

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document