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Published 1999 | Published
Book Section - Chapter Open

ISOMAX: Flight Performance of the Isotope Magnet Experiment

Abstract

ISOMAX, a new balloon-borne cosmic ray instrument developed to measure the isotopic composition of the light elements in the cosmic radiation, was flown for the first time on August 4-5, 1998, from Lynn Lake, Manitoba, Canada. The main purpose of the ISOMAX program is to obtain the ratio of radioactive 10Be to stable 9Be over a wide range of energies, and consequently a wide range of time-dilation factors. Configured for its first flight, ISOMAX has a geometry factor of 450 cm^2sr and uses a large, high-field, superconducting magnet in conjunction with state-of-the-art tracking, time-of-flight, and Cherenkov detectors to measure light isotopes with a mass resolution better than 0.25 amu over the ~0.2-1.7 Ge V /nucleon energy range. In the 1998 flight, the maximum detectable rigidity of the ISO MAX magnetic spectrometer was 970 GV/c for He at 60% of the full magnetic field. ISOMAX returned over 16 hours of data from altitudes of more than 36 km as well as considerable data from lower altitudes. In this paper, a description of the instrument and initial isotopic results will be presented. The performance and results from the individual detector systems are discussed in other papers presented at this meeting.

Additional Information

Copyright 1999 University of Utah. Provided by the NASA Astrophysics Data System.

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