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A Geant Study of the Scintillating Optical Fiber (SOFCAL) Cosmic Ray DetectorRecent energy measurements by balloon-borne passive emulsion chambers indicate that the flux ratios of protons to helium nuclei and of protons to all heavy nuclei decrease as the primary cosmic ray energy per nucleon increases above approx. 200 GeV/n, and suggest a "break" in the proton spectrum between 200 GeV and 5 TeV. However, these passive emulsion chambers are limited to a lower energy threshold of approx. 5 TeV/n, and cannot fully explore this energy regime. Because cosmic ray flux and composition details may be significant to acceleration models, a hybrid detector system called the Scintillating Optical Fiber Calorimeter (SOFCAL) has been designed and flown. SOFCAL incorporates both conventional passive emulsion chambers and an active calorimeter utilizing scintillating plastic fibers as detectors. These complementary types of detectors allow the balloon-borne SOFCAL experiment to measure the proton and helium spectra from approx. 400 GeV/n to approx. 20 TeV. The fundamental purpose of this study is to use the GEANT simulation package to model the hadronic and electromagnetic shower evolution of cosmic rays incident on the SOFCAL detector. This allows the interpretation of SOFCAL data in terms of charges and primary energies of cosmic rays, thus allowing the determinations of cosmic ray flux and composition as functions of primary energy.
Document ID
19990010035
Acquisition Source
Marshall Space Flight Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Munroe, Ray B., Jr.
(Mobile Univ. Mobile, AL United States)
Date Acquired
August 19, 2013
Publication Date
September 1, 1998
Subject Category
Optics
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NGT8-52836
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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