Ultra heavy cosmic ray experiment (A0178)
Abstract
The Ultra Heavy Cosmic Ray Experiment (UHCRE) is based on a modular array of 192 side viewing solid state nuclear track detector stacks. These stacks were mounted in sets of four in 48 pressure vessels using 16 peripheral LDEF trays. The geometry factor for high energy cosmic ray nuclei, allowing for Earth shadowing, was 30 sq m sr, giving a total exposure factor of 170 sq m sr y at an orbital inclination of 28.4 degs. Scanning results indicate that about 3000 cosmic ray nuclei in the charge region with Z greater than 65 were collected. This sample is more than ten times the current world data in the field (taken to be the data set from the HEAO-3 mission plus that from the Ariel-6 mission) and is sufficient to provide the world's first statistically significant sample of actinide cosmic rays. Results are presented including a sample of ultra heavy cosmic ray nuclei, analysis of pre-flight and post-flight calibration events and details of track response in the context of detector temperature history. The integrated effect of all temperature and age related latent track variations cause a maximum charge shift of + or - 0.8e for uranium and + or - 0.6e for the platinum-lead group. Astrophysical implications of the UHCRE charge spectrum are discussed.
- Publication:
-
LDEF: 69 Months in Space. First Post-Retrieval Symposium
- Pub Date:
- June 1992
- Bibcode:
- 1992ldef.symp...27T
- Keywords:
-
- Cosmic Rays;
- Energy Spectra;
- Heavy Nuclei;
- Long Duration Exposure Facility;
- Radiation Detectors;
- Radiation Dosage;
- Calibrating;
- Half Life;
- Heao 3;
- Particle Tracks;
- Pressure Vessels;
- Solid State Devices;
- Temperature Effects;
- Uranium;
- Space Radiation