Publication Date:
2011-08-18
Description:
The chemical composition of cosmic ray nuclei, the value of Z varying between 3 and 28, and being between a few hundred MeV/nucleon and a few hundred GeV/nucleon, is compared with a consistent set of propagation calculations. These include the effects of spallation (energy-dependent cross sections are used), escape, ionization loss in the interstellar medium, and deceleration in the solar cavity. The amount of matter traversed by cosmic rays is found to be approximately 7 g/sq cm, independent of energy between 100 MeV/nucleon and 2 GeV/nucleon. Above 2 GeV/nucleon, the escape length varies as the -0.4 + or 0.1 power of the energy. In addition, a procedure has been developed to measure the shape of the cosmic ray path length distribution. Utilizing the ratio of Fe secondaries to Fe in the cosmic rays, presently available data are found to be consistent with an exponential distribution and they eliminate models in which the path length distribution is severely truncated. To tie down the shape of the distribution more precisely, new measurements of the cosmic ray composition, presently becoming available from experiments on the HEAO 3 satellite, will have to be coupled with improved measurements of the energy dependence of partial and total cross sections.
Keywords:
SPACE RADIATION
Type:
Astrophysical Journal; vol. 247
Format:
text
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