Title: COSMIC RAYS
1COSMIC RAYS
2Cosmic rays-a long story
- C.T.R Wilson discovered in 1900 the continuous
atmospheric ionization. It was believed to be
due to the natural radiation of the Earth. In
other words, from the ground up. - Wilson noticed the reappearance of drops of
condensation in expanded dust free gas, the first
cloud chamber.
3Condensation tracks on ions
- Wilson suspected the
- tracks might be condensation on nuclei - ions
that were the cause of the residue conductivity
of the atmosphere.
4The Wilson Cloud Chamber
5Where did the ions come from?
- At the beginning of the 20th century scientists
were puzzled by the fact that more radiation
existed in the environment than could be
explained by natural background radiation - The debate was solved on a balloon flight in
1912 from the University of Vienna.
6Victor Hess
- In 1912 a Victor Hess, a German scientist, took a
radiation counter (a simple gold leaf
electroscope) on a balloon flight. - He rose to 17, 500 feet (without oxygen) and
measured the amount of radiation increase as the
balloon climbed.
7Victor Hess and the Balloon
- Victor discovered that up to about 700 m the
ionization rate decreased but then increased with
altitude showing an outer space origin for
ionization.
8Not from the Sun
- During subsequent flights Hess determined that
the ionizing radiation was not of solar origin
since it was similar for day and night. - It was initially believed that the radiation
consisted of gamma rays only. - But there was still a dispute as to whether the
radiation was coming from above or from below.
9Birth Cries of the Atoms
- In 1925 Robert Millikan of Caltech introduced the
term cosmic rays after concluding that the
particles came from above not below a cloud
chamber. - He used elaborate electroscopes.
10Cosmic Ray Electroscope
- Electroscope of cosmic ray apparatus used by
Millikan. Millikan and a fellow scientist,
Compton, were locked in a debate about the
nature of cosmic rays. Compton won, arguing that
they were charge particles. Millikan believed
they were uncharged.
11The nature of the raysMuons and Protons
- Seth Nedermeyer and Carl Anderson discover muons
in cosmic rays. - T.H. Johnson discovered that the ionization rate
increased from east to west viewing angle
indicating they were positively charged particles
(protons). The increase occurs because the rays
are deflected by the earths magnetic field, which
changes in its strength with latitude.
12Charged Particles!
- In 1929 a Russian scientists, D. Skobelzyn,
discovered ghostly tracks made by cosmic rays in
a cloud chamber. - Also in 1929 Bothe and Kolhorster verified that
the cloud chamber tracks were curved. Thus the
cosmic radiation was charged particles.
13The Caltech Cloud Chamber
- Milliken became President of Caltech and was
instrumental in the building of a high magnetic
field cloud chamber. - Carl Anderson and Milliken made numerous
photographs of both positive and negative
particles tracks. - The conclusion was that the positive particles
must be protons.
14Occhialini and Blackett
- Giuseppe Occhialini and Patrick Blackett devised
a method of making cosmic rays take their own
photographs. - They observed in 1932 the formation of multiple
particles, pair production. - Occasionally they observed the production of
particle showers using lead and copper plated
places in the cloud chamber.
15Extensive air showers
- Pierre Auger noticed that two detectors located
several meters apart detected particles at the
same time. He discovered EAS, showers of
secondary nuclei produced by the interaction of
the primary particle with air molecules. (1938)
16(No Transcript)
17EAS
- It is the secondary particles resulting from the
interaction of the the primary particle that are
detected by the detectors used in our detectors
and others arrays.
18An Extensive Air Shower
- Cosmic rays enter the earths upper atmosphere
and interact with nuclei. - Secondary particles result that also interact.
- The shower grows with time.
- Certain particles never reach the surface.
- Some particles, such as muons, do reach the
surface and can be detected. - It is these that we wish to detect.
19Other tools The emulsion plate
- The study of cosmic rays was greatly enhanced by
the use of photographic emulsion plates. The
plates were taken to numerous places, including
the Pyrenees and left for extended periods of
time. - The results were images of complete pion decays
including the discovery of the so called
strange particles.
20The Spark Chamber
- In the 1960s spark chambers were common. When a
charged particle ionizes gas between the plates,
sparks fly along the track, marking the track of
the particle.
21Early Discoveries from CR
- The mass of the proton was determined to a 15
error (Anderson, Chadwick) - The discovery of the antiparticle of the
electron, the positron (Klemperer). - The discovery of the mesotron, with mass between
the electron and the proton - The first evidence of meson decay (Williams and
Roberts) - The measurement of the decay (Rossi)
- The discovery of He nuclei and heavier elements
in CR (Frier)
22Present Cosmic Ray Studies
- Cosmic Ray studies continue in spite of the
development of high energy particle accelerators. - The energy of the highest energy cosmic rays
still cannot be duplicated in accelerators. - The field is still very active as indicated by
the presentation of over 300 papers at the most
recent international conference on cosmic rays.
23What are cosmic rays?
- Primaries are particles with energies from 109
eV to 1021 eV. - An eV is a unit of energy. A 40 W reading light
uses about 1034 eV of energy in one hour. - (from James Pinfoli,
- Pinfold_at_phys.ualberta.ca)
- Cosmic rays within the range of 1012 eV to 1015
eV have been determined to be - 50 protons
- 25 alpha particles
- 13 C, N, and O nuclei
- lt1 electrons
- lt0.1 gammas
24The Energy Spectrum
- Existing models for the production of cosmic rays
only work to 1015 eV. - CR in excess of 1019 eV are believed to come from
sources relatively close to our Galaxy, but the
sources are unknown. - The highest energies!
- (from,www.phys.
- washington.edu)
25The Oh My God Particle
- In 1991 at the Flys Eye CR observatory in Utah a
primary particle of 3 x 1020 eV was recorded.
This is the equivalent of 51 joules - At present particle accelerators can reach
energies of 1012 eV. - The Fly Eye
- (from www.physics.adelaide.edu)
26The AGASMA EVENT
- In Japan, in 1993, the worlds largest array
recorded a large air shower believed to be the
result of a primary particle measured at 1021 eV.
These particles have energies six times higher
than present theories allow. - The mystery is, of course, what is the source of
the high energy particles including these
ultrahigh energy particles.
27Where do they come from?
- Low energy rays (less than 10 GeV) come from the
sun. - Supernovae may be the source of particles up to
1015 eV. - The sources for ultrahigh cosmic rays are
probably, active galactic nuclei and gamma ray
bursts. - (www.phys.washington.edu)
28Supernovas
- Nuclei receive energy from the shock wave of the
supernova explosion. - The energy spectrum indicates that most of the
supernova particles have less than 1015 eV - (image fromwww.drjoshuadavidstone.com/
astro/supernova.jpg
29The ultra high particles?
- Without going into great detail the problem with
the source of the UHECR is that to achieve the
high energies they must originate in a very large
extragalactic field or from a process that
doesnt require such distance. - Suggestions abound but there is not a agreement
as to the origin. Maybe there isnt a single
source. - One suggestions is that UHECREs originate from
the decay of more primary particles resulting
from the big bang.
30A Summary
- Lower energy, lt 1016 eV
- Direct observation possible, 85 are protons.
- Most likely source are supernova shock wave
acceleration. - These are particles below the knee in the energy
spectrum.
- Ultra High energy, gt 1016 eV.
- Only indirect EAR shower information is
available. - Source of the particles with gt 1016 eV is
unknown.
31High School Based Detectors
- Numerous detector arrays using high schools as
sites for individual detectors have been built or
are in the process of development. - The projects range from arrays using hundreds of
detectors covering thousands of km2 to small
arrays involving only a few detectors in an area
only a few hundred meters square.
32CHICOS (California high school cosmic ray
observatory)
- Operated by Caltech, CHICOS is an active research
array with a goal to study CR is the range of
1018 to 1021 eV using refurbished detectors from
a neutrino experiment and 1 m2 scintillators - Currently 51 sites are setup and working.
- Image from www.chicos.caltech.edu
33ALTA (University of Alberta Large Time
Coincidence Array)
- The stated purpose of the ALTA project is to
search for time correlations between EASs. - At present 16 high schools are involved.
- The project is part of the Canadian learning
standards with students receiving credit. - (image from www.physics.ubs.ca)
34ALTA MAP
35CROP (Cosmic Ray Observatory Project, University
of Nebraska)
- A project to study EAS from particles gt 1018 eV.
- Thirty operating schools covering 75000 sq miles
is the goal of the project. - Detectors are 1 m2 scintillators donated by the
Chicago Air Shower Array. - Image from Marion High School. Http//marian.creig
hton. edu
36SALTA (Snowmass Area Large-scale Time-coincidence
Array)
- A project to set up detectors in Colorado.
- Linking high schools via Internet connecting to
form a large array. - A modern hot-air balloon flight in 2001 reenacted
Hesss 1912 flight. Image from
http//faculty.washington.edu/wilkes
37WALTA (Washington Large Area Time Array)
- A project of the University of Washington.
- As of late 2002 eighteen high schools around
Seattle are participating. See image. (from
www.phys.washington.edu )
38The Pitt/UMSL Projects
- A project of the University of Pitt and
University of Mo at St. Louis. - The project involves high school teachers
building and using scintillator type detectors
aimed at muon detection.
39Tentative Plans 3-week quarknet workshop.
Summer, 2004 Julia ThompsonProf. of Physics,
Univ. of Pittsburgh Adjunct Prof. of physics
and/or in participating in a proposed project to
put cosmic ray detectors in high schools,
eventually perhaps linking them into a shared
network. Teachers can register for 1-3 credit
hours from UMSL for the workshop, and will
receive a personal stipend of 300./week,
Physics, Univ. of Missouri at St. Louis A 3-week
summer workshop for physics teachers is expected
at the University of Missouri at St. Louis (UMSL)
in summer, 2004. through the quarknet program
The workshop would be open to area high school
physics teachers interested in expanding their
knowledge of current modern and a 250.
instructional materials stipend.