The cosmic-ray He-3/He-4 ratio from 100 to 1600 MeV/amu

The Superconducting Magnet Instrument for Light Isotopes (SMILI) flew for 19 hours on September 1, 1989, with a residual overburden of 5 g/sq cm. It measured the charge, rigidity, and velocity of 30,000 cosmic-ray helium nuclei, with velocity determined by time-of-flight and Cerenkov techniques. Usi...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Astrophysical journal 1993-08, Vol.413 (1), p.268
Hauptverfasser: Beatty, J. J., Ficenec, D. J., Tobias, S., Mitchell, J. W., Mckee, S., Nutter, S., Tarle, G., Tomasch, A., Clem, J., Guzik, T. G.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The Superconducting Magnet Instrument for Light Isotopes (SMILI) flew for 19 hours on September 1, 1989, with a residual overburden of 5 g/sq cm. It measured the charge, rigidity, and velocity of 30,000 cosmic-ray helium nuclei, with velocity determined by time-of-flight and Cerenkov techniques. Using these data, the flux and isotopic composition of helium as a function of energy were determined. The observed isotopic composition is consistent with that expected from interstellar propagation models inferred from the secondaries of CNO, in contrast to earlier observations which indicated an overabundance of He-3. We discuss constraints that this result places on cosmic-ray transport and solar modulation models.
ISSN:0004-637X
1538-4357
DOI:10.1086/172994