Top Banner
Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010 1 May 15, 2010 Rutgers Cosmic Ray Workshop
14

Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010 1 May 15, 2010 Rutgers Cosmic Ray Workshop.

Dec 22, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010 1 May 15, 2010 Rutgers Cosmic Ray Workshop.

Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010

1

May 15, 2010

Rutgers Cosmic RayWorkshop

Page 2: Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010 1 May 15, 2010 Rutgers Cosmic Ray Workshop.

Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010

2

Cosmic Rays

Earth is continually bombarded by particles from outer space

• What are they?

• Where do they come from?

• How are they created?

• How do we detect them?

Page 3: Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010 1 May 15, 2010 Rutgers Cosmic Ray Workshop.

Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010

3

Discovery of Cosmic Rays

Cosmic rays discovered in 1912 by Victor Hess

• measured radiation levels aboard a balloon up to 17,500 feet (without oxygen)

• found increasing radiation levels at higher altitudes

Page 4: Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010 1 May 15, 2010 Rutgers Cosmic Ray Workshop.

Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010

4

Primary Particle Flux

flux falls ~30 orders of magnitude, spanning12 orders of magnitudein energy

Power Law

Intensity ~ E–2.7

look for features

seems monotonous

but

Page 5: Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010 1 May 15, 2010 Rutgers Cosmic Ray Workshop.

Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010

5

Page 6: Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010 1 May 15, 2010 Rutgers Cosmic Ray Workshop.

Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010

6

At the Surface of the Earth

~ 2 particles per secondthrough outstretched hand

Rule of Thumb:

irreducible source of natural radioactivity

28 mrem/year at sea level

twice as much if you live in Denver

• mostly muons (and neutrinos)

• primary cosmic rays interact in the atmosphere

Page 7: Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010 1 May 15, 2010 Rutgers Cosmic Ray Workshop.

Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010

7

What are the cosmic ray particles?

Must be stable in order to get here• protons• electrons• neutrinos• photons• nuclei (He Fe)

Not neutrons neutron lifetime ~ 15 minutes

what about antiparticles• anti protons• positrons• anti nuclei

Not seen we live in matter universe

Page 8: Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010 1 May 15, 2010 Rutgers Cosmic Ray Workshop.

Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010

8

Page 9: Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010 1 May 15, 2010 Rutgers Cosmic Ray Workshop.

Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010

9

Page 10: Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010 1 May 15, 2010 Rutgers Cosmic Ray Workshop.

Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010

10

Composition

• 80% protons

• 15% He

• 0.1% photons

• rest mostly C and Fe

some electrons below 10 GeV

generally

depends on energy

Page 11: Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010 1 May 15, 2010 Rutgers Cosmic Ray Workshop.

Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010

11

Where do the Cosmic Rays Come From?

Basically we’re not sure!

Page 12: Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010 1 May 15, 2010 Rutgers Cosmic Ray Workshop.

Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010

12

Primary Cosmic Ray Flux

Page 13: Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010 1 May 15, 2010 Rutgers Cosmic Ray Workshop.

Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010

13

Cosmic Ray Air Shower

Page 14: Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010 1 May 15, 2010 Rutgers Cosmic Ray Workshop.

Cosmic Ray Workshop May 15, 2010

14

Particles at Surface