Title of article :
Launch and commissioning of the PAMELA experiment on board the Resurs-DK1 satellite Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
M. Casolino، نويسنده , , P. Picozza، نويسنده , , On Behalf of the PAMELA collaboration، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
7
From page :
2064
To page :
2070
Abstract :
PAMELA is a satellite borne experiment designed to study with great accuracy cosmic rays of galactic, solar, and trapped nature in a wide energy range (protons: 80 MeV–700 GeV, electrons 50 MeV–400 GeV). Main objective is the study of the antimatter component: antiprotons (80 MeV–190 GeV), positrons (50 MeV–270 GeV) and search for antimatter (with a precision of the order of 10−8). The experiment, housed on board the Russian Resurs-DK1 satellite, was launched on June, 15th 2006 in a 350 × 600 km orbit with an inclination of 70°. The detector consists of a permanent magnet spectrometer core to provide rigidity and charge sign information, a Time-of-Flight system for velocity and charge information, a silicon–tungsten calorimeter and a neutron detector for lepton/hadron identification. An anticounter system is used off-line to reject false triggers coming from the satellite. In self-trigger mode the calorimeter, the neutron detector and a shower tail catcher are capable of an independent measure of the lepton (e+ + e−) component up to 2 TeV. In this work we focus on the first months of operations of the experiment during the commissioning phase.
Keywords :
Cosmic rays , Antimatter , Satellite-borne experiment
Journal title :
Advances in Space Research
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
Advances in Space Research
Record number :
1132183
Link To Document :
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