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Schmidt, W.K.H.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Greenbelt, MD (USA). Goddard Space Flight Center1977
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Greenbelt, MD (USA). Goddard Space Flight Center1977
AbstractAbstract
[en] Gamma ray burst sources are presumably not larger than 10 to the 9th power cm as inferred from observed flux variations. If they are homogeneous and isotropically radiating, then from photon density considerations, they would have to be optically thick due to gamma-gamma pair production when assumed to be too far away. Deviations of observed photo spectra from an exponential shape around 1 MeV lead to an upper limit of the possible distance of such sources of only 2 kpc from the sun. Thus the sources must be galactic unless the radiation is highly beamed or emerges from a relativistically moving shell. This conclusion depends only on observed parameters. The possible presence of particles and fields in the sources would require them to be even closer
Primary Subject
Source
Jun 1977; 13 p; NASA-TM--78053; X--661-77-152; Available from NTIS. PC A02/MF A01
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Report
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Cline, T.L.; Schmidt, W.K.H.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Greenbelt, Md. (USA). Goddard Space Flight Center1976
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Greenbelt, Md. (USA). Goddard Space Flight Center1976
AbstractAbstract
[en] The results of a study (Carter et. al.) of gamma ray bursts using long-duration balloon exposure are analyzed. Arguments are presented against the from conclusion that the size spectrum extrapolates to a power law with index from 1.0 to -0.5, and that therefore the gamma ray bursts are of galactic origin. It is claimed that the data are consistent with an upper limit over 100 times that proposed, and that therefore no conclusion can be drawn from the measurements regarding the nature or origin of gamma ray bursts. The resulting upper limit to the rate of occurrence of small bursts lies above the -1.5 index power law extrapolation of the size spectrum of known events, i.e., greater than the rate expected from an infinitely extended source region
Primary Subject
Source
Oct 1976; 9 p; NASA-TM-X--71205; X--661-76-222; Available from NTIS., PC A02/MF A01
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Report
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Cline, T.L.; Desai, U.D.; Schmidt, W.K.H.; Teegarden, B.J.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Greenbelt, Md. (USA). Goddard Space Flight Center1976
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Greenbelt, Md. (USA). Goddard Space Flight Center1976
AbstractAbstract
[en] A search was conducted for cosmic gamma ray bursts of small size and of sufficient frequency of occurrence to be detected during a one day observation program. Two similar detectors, successfully balloon-borne from launch sites in South Dakota and Texas, achieved about 20 hours of simultaneous operation at several millibars atmospheric depth, with continuous separation of over 1,500 km. Fluctuations of the counting rates of < 150-keV photons with temporal structures from microseconds to several minutes were compared in order to detect coincident or associated responses from the two instruments. No coincident gamma-ray burst events were detected. The resulting integral size spectrum of small bursts, from this and from all other searches, remains a spectrum of upper limits, consistent with an extrapolation of the size spectrum of the largest known bursts, fitting a power low of index -1.5
Primary Subject
Source
Dec 1976; 13 p; NASA-TM-X--71250; X--661-76-278; Available from NTIS. PC A02/MF A01
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Report
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Jones, W.V.; Ormes, J.S.; Schmidt, W.K.H.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Greenbelt, Md. (USA). Goddard Space Flight Center1976
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Greenbelt, Md. (USA). Goddard Space Flight Center1976
AbstractAbstract
[en] The reliability of performing measurements of cosmic ray energy spectra with a thin ionization calorimeter was investigated. Monte Carlo simulations were used to determine whether energy response fluctuations would cause measured spectra to be different from the primary spectra. First, Gaussian distributions were assumed for the calorimeter energy resolutions. The second method employed a detailed Monte Carlo simulation of cascades from an isotropic flux of protons. The results show that as long as the energy resolution does not change significantly with energy, the spectral indices can be reliably determined even for sigma/sub e//e = 50%. However, if the energy resolution is strongly energy dependent, the measured spectra do not reproduce the true spectra. Energy resolutions greatly improving with energy result in measured spectra that are too steep, while resolutions getting much worse with energy cause the measured spectra to be too flat
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Secondary Subject
Source
Sep 1976; 40 p; NASA-TM-X--71198; X--661-76-221; Available from NTIS., PC A03/MF A01
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Cheshire, D.L.; Huggett, R.W.; Jones, W.V.; Rountree, S.P.; Schmidt, W.K.H.
Louisiana State Univ., Baton Rouge (USA)1975
Louisiana State Univ., Baton Rouge (USA)1975
AbstractAbstract
[en] The inelastic interaction mean free paths lambda of 5, 10, and 15 GeV/c pions were measured by determining the distribution of first interaction locations in a modular tungsten-scintillator ionization spectrometer. In addition to commonly used interaction signatures of a few (2 to 5) particles in two or three consecutive modules, a chi2 distribution is used to calculate the probability that the first interaction occurred at a specific depth in the spectrometer. This latter technique seems to be more reliable than use of the simpler criteria. No significant dependence of lambda on energy was observed. In tungsten, lambda for pions is 206 +- 6 g/cm2
Original Title
5 to 15 GeV/c
Primary Subject
Source
1975; 24 p; NASA-CR--143259; Sponsored in Part by NSF. Available from NTIS. $3.25.
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Arens, J.F.; Balasubrahmanyan, V.K.; Ormes, J.F.; Siohan, F.; Schmidt, W.K.H.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Greenbelt, MD (USA). Goddard Space Flight Center1978
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Greenbelt, MD (USA). Goddard Space Flight Center1978
AbstractAbstract
[en] A balloon-borne detector system for extending the study of cosmic ray composition to the energy region beyond 100 GeV/nucleon is described. The instrument incorporates an ionization calorimeter and a gas Cherenkov counter filled with freon for the determination of energies, and a charge module, consisting of scintillation and a lucite Cherenkov counter, for determining the charge of the incoming particle. The scintillators were utilized to determine the position of the incoming particle in addition to its charge. The characteristics of these detectors with respect to resolution, and the methods employed in laboratory calibration, cross-checks with flight data and actual performance in the flights are described in detail. Monte Carlo simulation of the ionization calorimeter and comparison of the response of the calorimeter and gas Cherenkov counter for complex nuclei was used to convert the observed calorimeter signal to absolute energy in a consistent manner
Source
Nov 1978; 42 p; Available from NTIS. PC A03/MF A01
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AbstractAbstract
No abstract available
Primary Subject
Source
Letter to the editor.
Record Type
Journal Article
Journal
Nature (London); ISSN 0028-0836; ; v. 278(5706); p. 723-725
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AbstractAbstract
No abstract available
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Source
Letter to the editor.
Record Type
Journal Article
Journal
Nature (London); ISSN 0028-0836; ; v. 271(5645); p. 525-527
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Atallah, K.; Cleghorn, T.F.; Modlinger, A.; Schmidt, W.K.H.
13th international cosmic ray conference. Vol. 11973
13th international cosmic ray conference. Vol. 11973
AbstractAbstract
No abstract available
Primary Subject
Source
Denver Univ., Colo. (USA); p. 208-212; 1973
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Report
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Conference
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Cheshire, D.L.; Huggett, R.W.; Jones, W.V.; Schmidt, W.K.H.; Simon, M.
Proceedings of the calorimeter workshop, May 19751975
Proceedings of the calorimeter workshop, May 19751975
AbstractAbstract
[en] A tungsten-scintillator ionization calorimeter of approximately 1000 g/cm2 total depth has been exposed to 100, 200, and 300 GeV/c proton beams at FNAL. The apparatus included a five layer CsI target upstream from the calorimeter. Preliminary data are described. Results are presented in terms of the cascade development curves and the fraction of the incident energy measured by the apparatus. The resolutions are given as a function of calorimeter depth and as a function of primary energy
Source
Atac, M. (ed.); Fermi National Accelerator Lab., Batavia, Ill. (USA); p. 263-269; 1975; International workshop on spectrometer design; Batavia, Illinois, USA; 9 May 1975
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