Cosmic rays studies with the PAMELA space experimentShow others and affiliations
2010 (English)In: Frascati Physics Series, 2010, Vol. 50, no SPEC. ISS., p. 1-10Conference paper, Published paper (Refereed)
Abstract [en]
The instrument PAMELA, in orbit since June 15th, 2006 on board the Russian satellite Resurs DK1, is delivering to ground 16 Gigabytes of data per day. The apparatus is designed to study charged particles in the cosmic radiation, with a particular focus on antiparticles as a possible signature of dark matter annihilation in the galactic halo; the combination of a magnetic spectrometer and different detectors-indeed-allows antiparticles to be reliably identified from a large background of other charged particles. New results on the antiproton-to-proton and positron-to-all-electron ratios over a wide energy range (1-100GeV) have been recently released by the PAMELA Collaboration, and will be summarized in this paper. While the antiproton-to-proton ratio does not show particular differences from an antiparticle standard secondary production, in the positron-to-all-electron ratio an enhancement is clearly seen at energies above 10GeV. Possible interpretations of this effect will be briefly discussed.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
2010. Vol. 50, no SPEC. ISS., p. 1-10
Keywords [en]
Dark matter, Galactic halo, In-orbit, Magnetic spectrometers, New results, Secondary production, Space experiments, Wide energy range, Cosmic rays, Positrons, Protons, High energy physics
National Category
Astronomy, Astrophysics and Cosmology
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-304971Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-84881653354ISBN: 9788874380534 (print)OAI: oai:DiVA.org:kth-304971DiVA, id: diva2:1612324
Conference
23rd Rencontres de Physique de la Vallee d'Aoste: Results and Perspectives in Particle Physics, La Thuile, Italy, March 1-7, 2009
Note
Not duplicate with DiVA 751861.QC 20211117
2021-11-172021-11-172022-09-06Bibliographically approved