THE GEOMAGNETIC LATITUDE EFFECT ON THE NUCLEON AND MESON COMPONENT OF COSMIC RAYS AT SEA LEVEL

Measurements have been taken on the changes in intensity of the nucleon and meson components of cosmic rays during a cruise of the Canadian Naval Icebreaker Labrador into the Arctic, through the North West Passage, and circumnavigating the North American Continent. The geomagnetic latitudes covered...

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Published in:Canadian Journal of Physics
Main Authors: Rose, D. C., Katzman, J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Science Publishing 1956
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1139/p56-001
https://cdnsciencepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/p56-001
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author Rose, D. C.
Katzman, J.
author_facet Rose, D. C.
Katzman, J.
author_sort Rose, D. C.
collection Canadian Science Publishing
container_issue 1
container_start_page 1
container_title Canadian Journal of Physics
container_volume 34
description Measurements have been taken on the changes in intensity of the nucleon and meson components of cosmic rays during a cruise of the Canadian Naval Icebreaker Labrador into the Arctic, through the North West Passage, and circumnavigating the North American Continent. The geomagnetic latitudes covered extend from 18°N. to 89°N. The latitude knee is clearly shown at a geomagnetic latitude of about 52° in the case of the nucleon component and less definitely between 40° and 50° in the case of the meson component. The rigidity of particles arriving in a vertical direction at 52° is 2.1 Bv. and at 45° is 3.7 Bv. Meyer and Simpson have shown that changes in the primary spectrum between 1948 and 1954 probably extend up to these rigidities and such changes should, therefore, be observable at sea level. The longitude effect at low latitudes is clearly shown by differences in intensity between the measurements on the east and west sides of North America. In the case of the meson component, the magnitude of the longitude effect at these longitudes was found to be greater than that shown by Millikan and Neher in 1936. The interpretation of the meson component results above the knee is complicated by difficulties in temperature correction. In the case of the nucleon component, an apparent longitude effect exists above the knee in that there was a small difference in the intensity at high latitudes in the eastern and western parts of the North American Arctic. No satisfactory explanation is offered for this. The diurnal variation of the nucleon component at high latitudes is shown but no unusual features were found. Appreciation is expressed to the Royal Canadian Navy for making these measurements possible.
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North West Passage
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North West Passage
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.1139/p56-001
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op_source Canadian Journal of Physics
volume 34, issue 1, page 1-19
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spelling crcansciencepubl:10.1139/p56-001 2025-01-16T20:32:20+00:00 THE GEOMAGNETIC LATITUDE EFFECT ON THE NUCLEON AND MESON COMPONENT OF COSMIC RAYS AT SEA LEVEL Rose, D. C. Katzman, J. 1956 https://doi.org/10.1139/p56-001 https://cdnsciencepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/p56-001 en eng Canadian Science Publishing http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/page/about/CorporateTextAndDataMining Canadian Journal of Physics volume 34, issue 1, page 1-19 ISSN 0008-4204 1208-6045 journal-article 1956 crcansciencepubl https://doi.org/10.1139/p56-001 2024-12-12T05:03:49Z Measurements have been taken on the changes in intensity of the nucleon and meson components of cosmic rays during a cruise of the Canadian Naval Icebreaker Labrador into the Arctic, through the North West Passage, and circumnavigating the North American Continent. The geomagnetic latitudes covered extend from 18°N. to 89°N. The latitude knee is clearly shown at a geomagnetic latitude of about 52° in the case of the nucleon component and less definitely between 40° and 50° in the case of the meson component. The rigidity of particles arriving in a vertical direction at 52° is 2.1 Bv. and at 45° is 3.7 Bv. Meyer and Simpson have shown that changes in the primary spectrum between 1948 and 1954 probably extend up to these rigidities and such changes should, therefore, be observable at sea level. The longitude effect at low latitudes is clearly shown by differences in intensity between the measurements on the east and west sides of North America. In the case of the meson component, the magnitude of the longitude effect at these longitudes was found to be greater than that shown by Millikan and Neher in 1936. The interpretation of the meson component results above the knee is complicated by difficulties in temperature correction. In the case of the nucleon component, an apparent longitude effect exists above the knee in that there was a small difference in the intensity at high latitudes in the eastern and western parts of the North American Arctic. No satisfactory explanation is offered for this. The diurnal variation of the nucleon component at high latitudes is shown but no unusual features were found. Appreciation is expressed to the Royal Canadian Navy for making these measurements possible. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic North West Passage Canadian Science Publishing Arctic Canadian Journal of Physics 34 1 1 19
spellingShingle Rose, D. C.
Katzman, J.
THE GEOMAGNETIC LATITUDE EFFECT ON THE NUCLEON AND MESON COMPONENT OF COSMIC RAYS AT SEA LEVEL
title THE GEOMAGNETIC LATITUDE EFFECT ON THE NUCLEON AND MESON COMPONENT OF COSMIC RAYS AT SEA LEVEL
title_full THE GEOMAGNETIC LATITUDE EFFECT ON THE NUCLEON AND MESON COMPONENT OF COSMIC RAYS AT SEA LEVEL
title_fullStr THE GEOMAGNETIC LATITUDE EFFECT ON THE NUCLEON AND MESON COMPONENT OF COSMIC RAYS AT SEA LEVEL
title_full_unstemmed THE GEOMAGNETIC LATITUDE EFFECT ON THE NUCLEON AND MESON COMPONENT OF COSMIC RAYS AT SEA LEVEL
title_short THE GEOMAGNETIC LATITUDE EFFECT ON THE NUCLEON AND MESON COMPONENT OF COSMIC RAYS AT SEA LEVEL
title_sort geomagnetic latitude effect on the nucleon and meson component of cosmic rays at sea level
url https://doi.org/10.1139/p56-001
https://cdnsciencepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/p56-001