Properties of Neon, Magnesium, and Silicon Primary Cosmic Rays Results from the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer
Author(s)
AMS Collaboration; Becker, Ulrich J; Behlmann, Matthew Daniel; Burger, Joseph D; Cai, Xudong; Capell, Michael H; Choutko, Vitali; Clark, C.; Dadzie, K.; Egorov, Alexander; Eline, Alexandre; Feng, Jie; Fisher, P.; Galaktionov, Y.; Hsieh, T. H.; Jia, Yi; Konyushikhin, M.; Kounina, Olga; Kounine, Andrei; Koutsenko, Vladimir; Kulemzin, Alexander; Lebedev, Alexei; Martin, T.; Mott, P.; Pashnin, A.; Phan, Huy Duc; Plyaskin, Vasily; Qin, Xiaoting; Rozhkov, Andrey B.; Solano Eizaguirre, Carlos; Ting, Samuel; Ting, S.M.; Urban, T.; Wang, X.; Weng, Z.L.; Yan, Q.; Zhang, Z.; ... Show more Show less
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© 2020 authors. Published by the American Physical Society. Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article's title, journal citation, and DOI. We report the observation of new properties of primary cosmic rays, neon (Ne), magnesium (Mg), and silicon (Si), measured in the rigidity range 2.15 GV to 3.0 TV with 1.8×106 Ne, 2.2×106 Mg, and 1.6×106 Si nuclei collected by the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer experiment on the International Space Station. The Ne and Mg spectra have identical rigidity dependence above 3.65 GV. The three spectra have identical rigidity dependence above 86.5 GV, deviate from a single power law above 200 GV, and harden in an identical way. Unexpectedly, above 86.5 GV the rigidity dependence of primary cosmic rays Ne, Mg, and Si spectra is different from the rigidity dependence of primary cosmic rays He, C, and O. This shows that the Ne, Mg, and Si and He, C, and O are two different classes of primary cosmic rays.
Date issued
2020Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Laboratory for Nuclear ScienceJournal
Physical Review Letters
Publisher
American Physical Society (APS)