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Featured researches published by J. W. Watts.


Nature | 2008

An excess of cosmic ray electrons at energies of 300-800 GeV

J. Chang; J. Adams; H. S. Ahn; G. L. Bashindzhagyan; Mark J. Christl; O. Ganel; T. G. Guzik; J. Isbert; K. C. Kim; E. N. Kuznetsov; M.I. Panasyuk; A. D. Panov; W. K. H. Schmidt; E. S. Seo; N. V. Sokolskaya; J. W. Watts; John P. Wefel; J. Wu; V.I. Zatsepin

Galactic cosmic rays consist of protons, electrons and ions, most of which are believed to be accelerated to relativistic speeds in supernova remnants. All components of the cosmic rays show an intensity that decreases as a power law with increasing energy (for example as E-2.7). Electrons in particular lose energy rapidly through synchrotron and inverse Compton processes, resulting in a relatively short lifetime (about 105 years) and a rapidly falling intensity, which raises the possibility of seeing the contribution from individual nearby sources (less than one kiloparsec away). Here we report an excess of galactic cosmic-ray electrons at energies of ∼300–800 GeV, which indicates a nearby source of energetic electrons. Such a source could be an unseen astrophysical object (such as a pulsar or micro-quasar) that accelerates electrons to those energies, or the electrons could arise from the annihilation of dark matter particles (such as a Kaluza–Klein particle with a mass of about 620 GeV).


The Astrophysical Journal | 1998

Cosmic-ray proton and helium spectra: Results from the JACEE Experiment

K. Asakimori; T. H. Burnett; Michael L. Cherry; K. Chevli; M. J. Christ; Sh. Dake; James H. Derrickson; W. F. Fountain; M. Fuki; John C. Gregory; Takayoshi Hayashi; R. Holynski; J. Iwai; A. Iyono; J. Johnson; M. Kobayashi; J. J. Lord; O. Miyamura; K. H. Moon; B. S. Nilsen; H. Oda; T. Ogata; E. D. Olson; T. A. Parnell; F. E. Roberts; Kishore Sengupta; T. Shiina; Steven Chester Strausz; T. Sugitate; Yoshiyuki Takahashi

Measurements of the cosmic-ray hydrogen and helium spectra at energies from 20 to 800 TeV are presented. The experiments were performed on a series of twelve balloon flights, including several long duration Australia to South America and Antarctic circumpolar flights. No clear evidence is seen for a spectral break. Both the hydrogen and the helium spectra are consistent with power laws over the entire energy range, with integral spectral indices 1.80 ± 0.04 and 1.68 -->+ 0.04−0.06 for the protons and helium, respectively. The results are fully consistent with expectations based on supernova shock acceleration coupled with a leaky box model of propagation through the Galaxy.


Bulletin of The Russian Academy of Sciences: Physics | 2009

Energy spectra of abundant nuclei of primary cosmic rays from the data of ATIC-2 experiment: Final results

A. D. Panov; J. Adams; H. S. Ahn; G. L. Bashinzhagyan; J. W. Watts; J. P. Wefel; J. Wu; O. Ganel; T. G. Guzik; V.I. Zatsepin; I. Isbert; K. C. Kim; Mark J. Christl; E. N. Kouznetsov; M. I. Panasyuk; E. S. Seo; N. V. Sokolskaya; J. Chang; W. K. H. Schmidt; A. R. Fazely

The final results of processing the data from the balloon-born experiment ATIC-2 (Antarctica, 2002–2003) for the energy spectra of protons and He, C, O, Ne, Mg, Si, and Fe nuclei, the spectrum of all particles, and the mean logarithm of atomic weight of primary cosmic rays as a function of energy are presented. The final results are based on improvement of the methods used earlier, in particular, considerably increased resolution of the charge spectrum. The preliminary conclusions on the significant difference in the spectra of protons and helium nuclei (the proton spectrum is steeper) and the non-power character of the spectra of protons and heavier nuclei (flattening of carbon spectrum at energies above 10 TeV) are confirmed. A complex structure of the energy dependence of the mean logarithm of atomic weight is found.


Bulletin of The Russian Academy of Sciences: Physics | 2007

Elemental energy spectra of cosmic rays from the data of the ATIC-2 experiment

A. D. Panov; J. H. AdamsJr.; H. S. Ahn; K. E. Batkov; G. L. Bashindzhagyan; J. W. Watts; J. P. Wefel; J. Wu; O. Ganel; T. G. Guzik; R. M. Gunashingha; V.I. Zatsepin; J. Isbert; K. C. Kim; Mark J. Christl; E. N. Kouznetsov; M.I. Panasyuk; E. S. Seo; N. V. Sokolskaya; J. Chang; W. K. H. Schmidt; A. R. Fazely

This paper reports on the results of measurements performed in the course of the ATIC-2 balloon experiment (2002–2003) for the energy spectra of particles (such as protons; He, C, O, Ne, Mg, Si, and Fe nuclei; and some groups of nuclei) and the all-particle energy spectrum in primary cosmic rays at energies ranging from 50 GeV to 200 TeV. The conclusion is drawn that the energy spectra of protons and helium nuclei differ substantially (the spectrum of protons is steeper) and that the shape of the energy spectra of protons and heavy nuclei cannot be described by a power function.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2012

CRÈME: The 2011 Revision of the Cosmic Ray Effects on Micro-Electronics Code

J. Adams; Abdulnasser F. Barghouty; Marcus H. Mendenhall; Robert A. Reed; Brian D. Sierawski; Kevin M. Warren; J. W. Watts; Robert A. Weller

We describe a tool suite, CRÈME, which combines existing capabilities of CREME96 and CREME86 with new radiation environment models and new Monte Carlo computational capabilities for single event effects and total ionizing dose.


International Journal of Radiation Applications and Instrumentation. Part D. Nuclear Tracks and Radiation Measurements | 1992

Ionizing radiation exposure of LDEF (pre-recovery estimates)

E.V. Benton; W. Heinrich; T. A. Parnell; T.W. Armstrong; James H. Derrickson; G. J. Fishman; A.L. Frank; J. W. Watts; B. Wiegel

The long duration exposure facility (LDEF), launched into a 258 nautical mile orbit with an inclination of 28.5 degrees, remained in space for nearly 6 yr. The 21,500 lb NASA satellite was one of the largest payloads ever deployed by the Space Shuttle. LDEF completed 32,422 orbits and carried 57 major experiments representing more than 200 investigators from 33 private companies, 21 universities and nine countries. The experiments covered a wide range of disciplines including basic science, electronics, optics, materials, structures and power and propulsion. A number of the experiments were specifically designed to measure the radiation environment. These experiments are of specific interest, since the LDEF orbit is essentially the same as that of the Space Station Freedom. Consequently, the radiation measurements on LDEF will play a significant role in the design of radiation shielding of the space station. The contributions of the various authors presented here attempt to predict the major aspects of the radiation exposure received by the various LDEF experiments and therefore should be helpful to investigators who are in the process of analyzing experiments which may have been affected by exposure to ionizing radiation. The paper discusses the various types and sources of ionizing radiation including cosmic rays, trapped particles (both protons and electrons) and secondary particles (including neutrons, spallation products and high-LET recoils), as well as doses and LET spectra as a function of shielding. Projections of the induced radioactivity of LDEF are also discussed.


Advances in Space Research | 1994

Comparison of model predictions with LDEF satellite radiation measurements

T.W. Armstrong; B.L. Colborn; B. A. Harmon; T. A. Parnell; J. W. Watts; E.V. Benton

Some early results are summarized from a program under way to utilize LDEF satellite data for evaluating and improving current models of the space radiation environment in low Earth orbit. Reported here are predictions and comparisons with some of the LDEF dose and induced radioactivity data, which are used to check the accuracy of current models describing the magnitude and directionality of the trapped proton environment. Preliminary findings are that the environment models underestimate both dose and activation from trapped protons by a factor of about two, and the observed anisotropy is higher than predicted.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1986

JACEE emulsion chambers for studying the energy spectra of high energy cosmic ray protons and helium

T. H. Burnett; Sh. Dake; M. Fuki; John C. Gregory; T. Hayashi; R. Holynski; J. Iwai; W. V. Jones; A. Jurak; J. J. Lord; O. Miyamura; H. Oda; T. Ogata; T. A. Parnell; Tomoyuki Saito; T. Tabuki; Y. Takahashi; T. Tominaga; J. W. Watts; B. Wilczynska; R. J. Wilkes; W. Wolter; B. Wosiek

Abstract Emulsion chambers are being used in a series of stratospheric balloon flights to study nuclear interactions, charge composition, and energy spectra of cosmic ray nuclei over the energy range 10 12 –10 15 eV. Charge identification involves grain, gap, and/or delta-ray counting in emulsion plates having different sensitivities on two sides of an acrylic base. Electromagnetic cascade energies are measured with resolutions of about 25% by the three-dimensional track counting method. This report describes the apparatus, the measurement techniques, and the analysis methods used to determine the primary proton and helium spectra.


Astrophysics and Space Sciences Transactions | 2011

Possible structure in the cosmic ray electron spectrum measured by the ATIC-2 and ATIC-4 experiments

A. D. Panov; V.I. Zatsepin; N. V. Sokolskaya; J. Adams; H. S. Ahn; G. L. Bashindzhagyan; J. Chang; Mark J. Christl; T. G. Guzik; J. Isbert; K. C. Kim; E. N. Kouznetsov; M. I. Panasyuk; E. Postnikov; E. S. Seo; J. W. Watts; J. P. Wefel; J. Wu

A strong excess in a form of a wide peak in the energy range of 300-800 GeV was discovered in the first measurements of the electron spectrum in the energy range from 20 GeV to 3 TeV by the balloon-borne experiment ATIC (J. Chang et al. Nature, 2008). The experimental data processing and analysis of the electron spectrum with different criteria for selection of electrons, completely independent of the results reported in (J. Chang et al. Nature, 2008) is employed in the present paper. The new independent analysis generally confirms the results of (J. Chang et al. Nature, 2008), but shows that the spectrum in the region of the excess is represented by a number of narrow peaks. The measured spectrum is compared to the spectrum of (J. Chang et al. Nature, 2008) and to the spectrum of the Fermi/LAT experiment.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1978

New limits on gamma-ray bursts

G. J. Fishman; C. A. Meegan; J. W. Watts; James H. Derrickson

Two balloon flights of large-area scintillation crystal detector arrays indicate that the rate of weak gamma-ray bursts is significantly below that expected from a uniform distribution of burst sources. This result, combined with the data from stronger bursts, gives strong evidence for a galactic confinement of burst sources. Reasonable models of confinement limit the intrinsic radiated energy per burst to the order of 10 to the (39th to 41st power) ergs.

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Mark J. Christl

Marshall Space Flight Center

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J. Adams

Marshall Space Flight Center

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J. Isbert

Louisiana State University

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A. D. Panov

Moscow State University

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T. G. Guzik

Louisiana State University

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J. P. Wefel

Louisiana State University

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