Title: COSMIC%20RAYS
1COSMIC RAYS
Dr. Darrel Smith Department of Physics Embry-Riddl
e Aeronautical University Prescott, AZ 86301
2Cosmic rays-early beginnings
- C.T.R Wilson discovered in 1900
- the Earths atmosphere was continually ionized.
- It was believed to be due to the natural
radiation from the Earth. In other words, from
the ground up. - Wilson noticed the reappearance of drops of
condensation in expanded dust free gas, the first
cloud chamber.
3The Wilson Cloud Chamber
4Where did the ions come from?
- At the beginning of the 20th century, scientists
were puzzled by the fact that more radiation
existed in the environment than could be
explained by natural background radiation. - The debate was resolved as a result of a balloon
flight in 1912 from the University of Vienna.
5Victor Hess
- In 1912 a Victor Hess, a German scientist, took a
radiation counter (a simple gold leaf
electroscope) on a balloon flight. - He rose to 17,500 feet (without oxygen) and
measured the amount of radiation as a function of
altitude.
6Victor Hess and the Balloon
- Victor discovered that up to about 700 m the
ionization rate decreased but then increased with
altitude. - This showed that outer space was the source of
the ionization.
7Not from the Sun
- During subsequent flights Hess determined that
the ionizing radiation was not of solar origin
since it was similar for day and night. - It was initially believed that the radiation
consisted of gamma rays only. - But there was still a dispute as to whether the
radiation was coming from above or from below.
8Source of Cosmic Rays
- In 1925 Robert Millikan of Caltech introduced the
term cosmic rays after concluding that the
particles came from above not below a cloud
chamber. - He used elaborate electroscopes.
9(No Transcript)
10Extensive Air Showers
- Cosmic rays enter the earths upper atmosphere
and interact with nuclei. - Secondary particles result that also interact.
- The shower grows with time.
- Some particles never reach the surface.
- Some particles, such as muons, do reach the
surface and can be detected.
11The Spark Chamber
- In the 1960s, spark chambers were common. When
a charged particle ionizes gas between the
plates, sparks fly along the track, marking the
track of the particle.
12Composition of Cosmic Rays
- Primaries are particles with energies from 109
eV to 1021 eV. - An eV is a unit of energy. A 40 W reading light
uses about 1034 eV of energy in one hour. - (from James Pinfoli,
- Pinfold_at_phys.ualberta.ca)
- Cosmic rays within therange of 1012 eV to 1015
eV have been determined to be - 50 protons
- 25 alpha particles
- 13 C, N, and O nuclei
- lt1 electrons
- lt0.1 gammas
13Cosmic Ray Energies
- Existing models for the production of cosmic rays
only work to 1015 eV. - CR in excess of 1019 eV are believed to come from
sources relatively close to our Galaxy, but the
sources are unknown. - The highest energies!
- (from,www.phys.
- washington.edu)
14Present Cosmic Ray Studies
- Cosmic Ray studies continue in spite of the
development of high energy particle accelerators
1012 eV. - The energy of the highest energy cosmic rays
still cannot be duplicated in accelerators.
15Fermilab Modern-Day Accelerator
E 1012 eV
16Where do cosmic rays come from?
- Low energy rays (less than 10 GeV) come from the
sun. - Supernovae may be the source of particles up to
1015 eV. - The sources for ultrahigh cosmic rays are
probably, active galactic nuclei and gamma ray
bursts. - (www.phys.washington.edu)
17Supernovas
- Nuclei receive energy from the shock wave of the
supernova explosion. - The energy spectrum indicates that most of the
supernova particles have less than 1015 eV - (image fromwww.drjoshuadavidstone.com/
astro/supernova.jpg
18High School Based Detectors
- Numerous CR detector arrays have been built and
are located at high schools. - The projects range from
- arrays using hundreds of detectors covering
thousands of km2 to - small arrays involving only a few detectors in an
area only a few hundred meters square.
19CHICOS (California high school cosmic ray
observatory)
- Operated by Caltech, CHICOS is an active research
array with a goal to study CR is the range of
1018 to 1021 eV using refurbished detectors from
a neutrino experiment and 1 m2 scintillators - Currently 51 sites are setup and working.
- Image from www.chicos.caltech.edu
20ALTA (University of Alberta Large Time
Coincidence Array)
- The stated purpose of the ALTA project is to
search for time correlations between EASs. - At present 16 high schools are involved.
- The project is part of the Canadian learning
standards with students receiving credit. - (image from www.physics.ubs.ca)
21ALTA MAP
22CROP (Cosmic Ray Observatory Project, University
of Nebraska)
- A project to study EAS from particles gt 1018 eV.
- Thirty operating schools covering 75,000 sq miles
is the goal of the project. - Detectors are 1 m2 scintillators donated by the
Chicago Air Shower Array. - Image from Marion High School. Http//marian.creig
hton. edu
23SALTA (Snowmass Area Large-scale
Time-coincidence Array)
- A project to set up detectors in Colorado.
- Linking high schools via Internet connecting to
form a large array. - A modern hot-air balloon flight in 2001 reenacted
Hesss 1912 flight. Image from
http//faculty.washington.edu/wilkes
24WALTA (Washington Large Area Time Array)
- A project of the University of Washington.
- As of late 2002 eighteen high schools around
Seattle are participating. See image. (from
www.phys.washington.edu )
25The Pitt/UMSL Projects
- A project of the University of Pitt and
University of Mo at St. Louis. - The project involves high school teachers
building and using scintillator type detectors
aimed at muon detection.