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Identifying Galactic Cosmic Ray Origins With Super-TIGER

Authors :
deNolfo, Georgia
Binns, W. R
Israel, M. H
Christian, E. R
Mitchell, J. W
Hams, T
Link, J. T
Sasaki, M
Labrador, A. W
Mewaldt, R. A
Stone, E. C
Waddington, C. J
Wiedenbeck, M. E
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2009.

Abstract

Super-TIGER (Super Trans-Iron Galactic Element Recorder) is a new long-duration balloon-borne instrument designed to test and clarify an emerging model of cosmic-ray origins and models for atomic processes by which nuclei are selected for acceleration. A sensitive test of the origin of cosmic rays is the measurement of ultra heavy elemental abundances (Z > or equal 30). Super-TIGER is a large-area (5 sq m) instrument designed to measure the elements in the interval 30 < or equal Z < or equal 42 with individual-element resolution and high statistical precision, and make exploratory measurements through Z = 60. It will also measure with high statistical accuracy the energy spectra of the more abundant elements in the interval 14 < or equal Z < or equal 30 at energies 0.8 < or equal E < or equal 10 GeV/nucleon. These spectra will give a sensitive test of the hypothesis that microquasars or other sources could superpose spectral features on the otherwise smooth energy spectra previously measured with less statistical accuracy. Super-TIGER builds on the heritage of the smaller TIGER, which produced the first well-resolved measurements of elemental abundances of the elements Ga-31, Ge-32, and Se-34. We present the Super-TIGER design, schedule, and progress to date, and discuss the relevance of UH measurements to cosmic-ray origins.

Subjects

Subjects :
Astrophysics

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Notes :
NNG06EO90A, , NNX09AC17G
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20090027058
Document Type :
Report