124 results on '"Wdowczyk, J."'
Search Results
2. The origin of cosmic rays of the highest energies
3. Evidence for spectral changes for local cosmic rays. I. The proton component
4. Galactic gamma rays from the inverse Compton process
5. Cosmic ray anisotropies at very high energies expected for new models of the Galactic magnetic field
6. Mass composition of primary cosmic rays in the range 1014-1017eV
7. Cosmic rays above 1017eV. II. Anisotropies for the various mass components
8. Cosmic rays above 1017eV. I. The mass spectrum and the overall anisotropies
9. The clustering of the arrival directions of the highest-energy cosmic rays
10. Cosmic rays of the highest energies: IV. Further studies of the galactic component
11. Cosmic rays of the highest energies: I. Evidence for a galactic component
12. Cosmic rays of the highest energies: II. The mass composition and primary spectrum
13. Cosmic rays of the highest energies: III. The nature of the candidate discrete sources
14. Cosmic gamma rays and neutrinos of energy near 1020eV
15. Predicted anisotropy in the arrival directions of cosmic gamma rays at 1014eV
16. Origin of cosmic rays of the highest energies.
17. The cosmic-ray anisotropy and the relative fluxes of heavy nuclei and protons in high-energy cosmic radiation.
18. Limits to extragalactic cosmic rays from gamma-ray fluxes.
19. Muons in extensive air showers at mountain altitudes.
20. Energy spectrum and interaction characteristics of cosmic rays in the energy range 1013-1016 eV.
21. The mean transverse momentum of secondaries from cosmic-ray interactions in the region of 2 � 105 GeV.
22. Ultra-high-energy cosmic rays from clusters of galaxies
23. Galactic cosmic rays above 1018eV
24. Determination of the number of interacting nucleons in nitrogen-emulsion nucleus collisions
25. Energy spectrum of cosmic-ray electrons
26. The gamma-ray background: a consequence of metagalactic cosmic ray origin?
27. The energy spectrum of cosmic ray positrons
28. Fluctuations of the muon to electron ratio in extensive air showers
29. An assessment of models for the γ-ray flux from the Galactic plane
30. Origin and propagation of cosmic rays in the range 100-1000 GeV
31. Mass dependence of the energy spectrum of primary cosmic rays
32. Propagation of cosmic rays of energy 1-100 GeV in the Galaxy
33. High-energy cosmic rays and the characteristics of photon-nucleus collisions
34. Calculations of characteristics of gamma ray and hadron families
35. Implications of strong leptonic interactions for very high energy cosmic ray phenomena
36. Role of neutrons in the propagation of extremely high energy cosmic rays
37. Origin of energetic cosmic rays. II. The possibility of a contribution from pulsars
38. Gamma-ray families and asymptotic properties of high-energy interactions
39. Cosmic rays from galactic and extragalactic sources
40. Properties of hadron interactions at extremely high energies
41. Possible mechanisms for the origin of the cosmic-ray showers coming from the direction of the Crab pulsar
42. The anisotropy of cosmic rays below 1018eV
43. The energy spectrum of primary cosmic rays above 1012eV
44. Cosmic ray origin above 1017eV
45. Extragalactic heavy nuclei in cosmic rays?
46. The inverse Compton contribution to medium-latitude Galactic gamma-ray emission
47. Spectral shape of cosmic rays over the Galaxy
48. Gamma ray families and the properties of high-energy interactions
49. Mass composition of primary cosmic rays at energies 1014-3×1015eV
50. Analysis of cosmic ray data in terms of models of high energy interactions
Catalog
Books, media, physical & digital resources
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.