Paper
Document
Submit new version
Download
Flag content
0

The Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS) on the International Space Station: Part I – results from the test flight on the space shuttle

Authors
M. Aguilar,J. Maestre
J. Allaby,B. Alpat,G. Ambrosi,H. Anderhub,L. Ao,A. Arefiev,P. Azzarello,E. Babucci,L. Baldini,M. Basile,D. Barancourt,F. Barão,G. Barbier,G. Barreira,R. Battiston,R. Becker,U. Becker,L. Bellagamba,P. Béné,J. Berdugo,P. Berges,B. Bertucci,A. Biland,S. Bizzaglia,S. Blasko,G. Boella,M. Boschini,M. Bourquin,L. Brocco,G. Bruni,M. Buénerd,J.D. Burger,W. Burger,Xudong Cai,C. Camps,Piermarco Cannarsa,M. Capell,D. Casadei,J. Casaus,G. Castellini,C. Cecchi,Yuan-Hann Chang,Hailian Chen,H. Chen,Z. Chen,N. Chernoplekov,Tzihong Chiueh,K. Cho,M. Choi,Young-Jun Choi,Yao-Li Chuang,F. Cindolo,V. Commichau,A. Contin,E. Cortin-Gil,M. Cristinziani,J. Cunha,T.S. Dai,C. Mendez,J. Deus,N. Dinu,L. Djambazov,I. D’Antone,Zhiwen Dong,P. Emonet,J. Engelberg,F.J. Eppling,T. Eronen,G. Esposito,P. Extermann,J. Favier,E. Fiandrini,P.H. Fisher,G. Fluegge,N. Fouque,Yu. Galaktionov,M. Gervasi,P. Giusti,D. Grandi,O. Grimms,W. Gu,K. Hangarter,A. Hasan,V. Hermel,H. Hofer,M. Huang,W. Hungerford,M. Ionica,R. Ionica,M. Jongmanns,K. Karlamaa,W. Karpiński,G. Kenney,J. Kenny,D. Kim,G. Kim,K.S. Kim,M. Kim,A. Klimentov,R. Kossakowski,V. Koutsenko,M. Kraeber,G. Laborie,T. Laitinen,G. Lamanna,E. Lanciotti,G. Laurenti,A. Lebedev,C. Lechanoine-Leluc,M. Lee,S.C. Lee,G. Lévi,P. Levtchenko,C. Liu,H.T. Liu,I. Lopes,G. Lu,Yudong Lu,K. Lübelsmeyer,D. Luckey,Werner Lustermann,C. Mañá,A. Margotti,F. Mayet,R.R. McNeil,Brigitte Meillon,M. Menichelli,A. Mihul,A. Mourão,Ari Mujunen,F. Palmonari,Alberto Papi,H. Park,Wonam Park,M. Pauluzzi,F. Pauss,E. Perrin,A. Pesci,A. Pevsner,M. Pimenta,V. Plyaskin,V. Pojidaev,M. Pohl,V. Postolache,N. Produit,P.G. Rancoita,D. Rapin,F. Raupach,D. Ren,Zhiyuan Ren,M. Ribordy,J.P. Richeux,E. Riihonen,Jouko Ritakari,S. Ro,U. Roeser,C. Rossin,R. Sagdeev,D. Santos,G. Sartorelli,C. Sbarra,S. Schael,A. Dratzig,E. Seo,G. Scolieri,Jaejin Shin,V. Shoutko,E. Shoumilov,R. Siedling,D. Son,Tao Song,M. Steuer,G.S. Sun,H. Suter,Xiao Tang,Samuel Ting,S.M. Ting,M. Tornikoski,J. Torsti,J. Trümper,J. Ulbricht,S. Urpo,E. Valtonen,J. Vandenhirtz,F. Velcea,E. Velikhov,B. Verlaat,I. Vetlitsky,F. Vezzu,J. Vialle,G. Viertel,Davide Vitè,H. Gunten,S. Wicki,W. Wallraff,B. Wang,J. Wang,Y. Wang,K. Wiik,C. Williams,S.X. Wu,Pan Xia,J.L. Yan,Limei Yan,C.G. Yang,J. Yang,Min Yang,S. Ye,P. Yeh,Z.Z. Xu,H.Y. Zhang,Z. Zhang,D. Zhao,G.Y. Zhu,Wei Zhu,H.L. Zhuang,A. Zichichi,B. Zimmermann,P. Zuccon
+219 authors
,Luca Baldini
Published
Aug 1, 2002
Show more
Save
TipTip
Document
Submit new version
Download
Flag content
0
TipTip
Save
Document
Submit new version
Download
Flag content

Abstract

The Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS) was flown on the space shuttle Discovery during flight STS-91 (June 1998) in a 51.7° orbit at altitudes between 320 and 390km. A search for antihelium nuclei in the rigidity range 1–140GV was performed. No antihelium nuclei were detected at any rigidity. An upper limit on the flux ratio of antihelium to helium of <1.1×10−6 was obtained. The high energy proton, electron, positron, helium, antiproton and deuterium spectra were accurately measured. For each particle and nuclei two distinct spectra were observed: a higher energy spectrum and a substantial second spectrum. Positrons in the second spectrum were found to be much more abundant than electrons. Tracing particles from the second spectra shows that most of them travel for an extended period of time in the geomagnetic field, and that the positive particles (p and e+) and negative ones (e−) originate from two complementary geographic regions. The second helium spectrum flux over the energy range 0.1–1.2GeV/nucleon was measured to be (6.3±0.9)×10−3(m2ssr)−1. Over 90 percent of the helium flux was determined to be 3He at the 90% confidence level.

Paper PDF

This paper's license is marked as closed access or non-commercial and cannot be viewed on ResearchHub. Visit the paper's external site.