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Direct Measurement of the Cosmic-Ray Carbon and Oxygen Spectra from 10  GeV/n to 2.2  TeV/n with the Calorimetric Electron Telescope on the International Space Station.

Authors :
Adriani O
Akaike Y
Asano K
Asaoka Y
Bagliesi MG
Berti E
Bigongiari G
Binns WR
Bongi M
Brogi P
Bruno A
Buckley JH
Cannady N
Castellini G
Checchia C
Cherry ML
Collazuol G
Ebisawa K
Fuke H
Gonzi S
Guzik TG
Hams T
Hibino K
Ichimura M
Ioka K
Ishizaki W
Israel MH
Kasahara K
Kataoka J
Kataoka R
Katayose Y
Kato C
Kawanaka N
Kawakubo Y
Kobayashi K
Kohri K
Krawczynski HS
Krizmanic JF
Link J
Maestro P
Marrocchesi PS
Messineo AM
Mitchell JW
Miyake S
Moiseev AA
Mori M
Mori N
Motz HM
Munakata K
Nakahira S
Nishimura J
de Nolfo GA
Okuno S
Ormes JF
Ospina N
Ozawa S
Pacini L
Palma F
Papini P
Rauch BF
Ricciarini SB
Sakai K
Sakamoto T
Sasaki M
Shimizu Y
Shiomi A
Sparvoli R
Spillantini P
Stolzi F
Sugita S
Suh JE
Sulaj A
Takita M
Tamura T
Terasawa T
Torii S
Tsunesada Y
Uchihori Y
Vannuccini E
Wefel JP
Yamaoka K
Yanagita S
Yoshida A
Yoshida K
Source :
Physical review letters [Phys Rev Lett] 2020 Dec 18; Vol. 125 (25), pp. 251102.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

In this paper, we present the measurement of the energy spectra of carbon and oxygen in cosmic rays based on observations with the Calorimetric Electron Telescope on the International Space Station from October 2015 to October 2019. Analysis, including the detailed assessment of systematic uncertainties, and results are reported. The energy spectra are measured in kinetic energy per nucleon from 10  GeV/n to 2.2  TeV/n with an all-calorimetric instrument with a total thickness corresponding to 1.3 nuclear interaction length. The observed carbon and oxygen fluxes show a spectral index change of ∼0.15 around 200  GeV/n established with a significance >3σ. They have the same energy dependence with a constant C/O flux ratio 0.911±0.006 above 25  GeV/n. The spectral hardening is consistent with that measured by AMS-02, but the absolute normalization of the flux is about 27% lower, though in agreement with observations from previous experiments including the PAMELA spectrometer and the calorimetric balloon-borne experiment CREAM.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1079-7114
Volume :
125
Issue :
25
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Physical review letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33416351
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.125.251102