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The Bess Investigation of the Origin of Cosmic-ray Antiprotons and Search for Cosmological Antimatter

Authors :
Mitchell, John
Yamamoto, Akira
Yoshimura, Koji
Makida, Yasuhiro
Matsuda, Shinya
Hasegawa, Masaya
Horikoshi, Atsushi
Tanaka,Ken-ichi
Suzuki, Junichi
Nishimura, Jun
Sakai, Ken-ichi
Shinoda, Ryoko
Orito, Rei
Matsukawa, Yosuke
Kusumoto, Akira
Fuke, Hideyuki
Mitchell, John W
Streitmatter, Robert E
Hams, Thomas
Sasaki, Makoto
Seo, Eun-suj
Lee, Moo-hyon
Kim, Ki-chun
Thakur, Neeharika
Ormes, Jonathan F
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2008.

Abstract

The Balloon-borne Experiment with a Superconducting Spectrometer (BESS) collaboration has made precise measurements of the spectra of cosmic ray antiprotons and light nuclei and conducted a sensitive search for antinuclei. Ten BESS high-latitude flights, eight from Canada and two from Antarctica, span more than a Solar cycle between 1993 and 2007/2008. BESS measurements of low-energy antiprotons constrain candidate models for dark matter including the possible signature of primordial black hole evaporation. The stringent BESS measurements of antiprotons and the elemental and isotopic spectra of H and He provide strong constraints on models of cosmic-ray transport in the Galaxy and Solar System. BESS has also reported the first antideuterium upper limit. BESS employs a superconducting magnetic-rigity spectrometer with time-of-flight and aerogel Cherenkov detectors to identify incident particles by charge, charge sign, mass, and energy. The BESS-Polar long-duration instrument has reduced lower energy limit of 100 MeV (top of the atmosphere) to increase its sensitivity to possible primary antiproton sources. BESS-Polar II was rebuilt with extended magnet lifetime, improved detector and electronic performance, and greater data storage capacity. It was flown fro Antarctica December 2007-January 2008, recording about 4.6 bission events during 24.5 days at float altitude with the magnet on. During the flight the influence of a high-speed stream in the Solar wind was observed. Details of the BESS-Polar II instrument and flight performance are reported elsewhere at this conference. The successful BESS-Polar II flight at Solar minimum is especially important. Most cosmic-ray antiprotons are secondary products of nuclear interactions of primary cosmic-ray nuclei with the interstellar gas, giving a spectrum that peaks at about 2 GeV and falls rapidly to higher and lower energies. However, BESS data taken in the previous Solar minimum show a small excess over secondary expectations at low energies, possibly suggesting the presence of an additional component that may be masked at higher levels of Solar modulation. The high-statistics Solar minimum data obtained by BESS-Polar II will provide a difinitive test of this component. We will review the BESS program and report the latest results including the antiproton and proton spectra measured in the BESS-Polar I flight, the search for cosmic antinuclei, and the status of the BESS-Polar II analysis.

Subjects

Subjects :
Astronomy

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20080032538
Document Type :
Report