For the last ten years an experiment aboard the International Space Station (ISS) has been counting cosmic ray events. What has it discovered about those mysterious high-energy particles.

At the beginning of the 20th century physicists were shocked to discover various substances that were emitting particles sub-atomic in size yet possessed energies that per particle were enormous, far greater than could be explained by the chemical reactions that were known at the time. The alpha and beta particles that were found coming from Uranium and other heavy elements defied everything that ‘classical physics’ understood. Remember at this time an atom meant something indivisible, nothing smaller and the concept of nuclear energy had to wait for the concept of a nucleus.

Antoine Henri Becquerel (l) visiting the Curies Pierre (m) and Marie (R). These three scientists would be awarded the 1903 Nobel Prize in Physics for their discovery of radioactivity. (Credit: Linda Hall Library)

An even bigger shock came when such particles were found to be shooting through the very air around us. At first scientists thought this radiation had to be coming from substances in the ground. To test that theory in 1912 physicist Victor Hess equipped a balloon with instruments that could detect the particles. He rode the balloon several kilometers into the air expecting that the intensity of the radiation would decrease as the balloon rose. Instead it got stronger. At an altitude of five kilometers Hess found that the intensity was twice as strong as at sea level. The particles were coming from outer space. They were cosmic rays!

Victor Hess preparing to take one of the balloon flights where he proved the radiation was coming to Earth from Outer Space. (Credit: The New York Times)

  Ever since then physicists have studied these mysterious particles hoping to learn where they come from and how they were accelerated to such enormous velocities and energies. In 1932 another mystery was added when the first ever anti-particle, an anti-electron was found in cosmic rays by the physicist Carl Anderson. For their work on cosmic rays Hess and Anderson would share the 1936 Nobel Prize in physics.

Physicist Carl Anderson with the first photograph of a cosmic ray Anti-electron. (Credit: Famous Scientists)

After a lot of hard work researchers recognized one thing, the cosmic ray particles they were studying at the Earth’s surface were not the original particles. You see when a particle moving through space at nearly the speed of light enters the Earth’s atmosphere it will quickly strike the nucleus of either an oxygen or nitrogen atom, often smashing that nucleus to bits. Those bits receive energy and momentum from the original particle and so continue downward, sometimes striking other nuclei in a cascading reaction. The bits from the collisions are what physicists see down here at Earth’s surface, only rarely does the original particle reach our instruments. (Actually that’s a good thing, our atmosphere acts as a shield protecting life down here at sea level from most of the radiation.)

The high energy particles we see here at Earth’s surface are actually not the primary cosmic rays but rather the fragments of numerous collisions triggered by the original particle. (Credit: CERN)

So in order to study the primary cosmic ray particles physicists have to get their detectors above the atmosphere and ever since the beginning of the space age they’ve tried to do just that. Early instruments put aboard the Skylab Station and taken into space by the Space Shuttle discovered that there were two distinct types of cosmic rays; one type came from the particles that make up the solar wind. The other type, which are usually more energetic, come from outside our solar system, some perhaps even from outside our galaxy.

The first Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS-1) was carried into orbit aboard the space shuttle. (Credit: Symettry Magazine)

The most sophisticated instrument sent into orbit thus far is the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer-2 (AMS-2) which for the last ten years has been attached to the outside of the International Space Station (ISS). During that time the AMS-2 has detected, measured and recorded over 44 million cosmic ray events every day. More than 160 billion cosmic ray particles have been cataloged by the instrument.

The Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer 2 (AMS-2) instrument has been attached to the outside of the International Space Station (ISS) for ten years now.

As a cosmic ray particle enters the AMS-2 its velocity is measured by either a Transition Radiation Detector (TRD) for high-energy particles or a Time of Flight Counter (TOF) for low energy particles. Inside the AMS-2 a permanent magnet causes the particle’s path to curve, the degree of curvature giving information about the particle’s mass. Finally a calorimeter measures the particle’s total energy. Using these pieces of data the physicists can both identify the cosmic particle, element and isotope, as well as its total energy.

The AMS-2 is a highly complex and sophisticated instrument that has measure the properties of over 160 billion cosmic ray particles. (Credit: ESA Earth Online)

What the AMS-2 has discovered about the cosmic rays coming from outside our solar system is first of all that they broadly fall into three categories, electrons, atomic nuclei and anti-matter particles; I’ll save the anti-matter for later. Electron intensity at high energy has been shown to be largely suppressed and we have a pretty good idea of why. You see because of their tiny mass, 1/2000th that of a proton, high-energy electrons traveling through interstellar space get pushed around by the magnetic field of the galaxy causing them to lose their energy and they cease to be part of the cosmic rays after only a few hundred light years.

Some of the results from AMS-2 for electrons and positrons (anti-electrons). (Credit: AMS Collaboration)

Protons and atomic nuclei manage to maintain their energies much further, 2000 times further or more. And keeping in mind that a proton is also the nucleus of a hydrogen atom what the measurements made by AMS-2 tell us is that cosmic ray particles are pretty much just normal stellar matter. That is about 80% of cosmic rays by mass are hydrogen nuclei (Protons) about 20% by mass are helium nuclei while all of the remaining elements make up less than 1% by mass. In fact this is just about the proportions we see when we measure the constituency of the matter in our Sun and nearby stars. The majority of cosmic rays are simply the nuclei the normal atoms that have somehow been accelerated to enormous velocities.

The cosmic ray spectrum, flux of particles versus energy as measured by AMS-2 and other experiments. Since we now have good measurements of how much energy these particles have the question is now, where do they get that energy? (Credit: SpringerLink)

Then there are the anti-matter particles and in truth the real purpose, the juicy meat of the AMS-2’s program was to detect and measure as many anti-particles as possible. You see most of the theories about how the big bang happened say that our Universe should consist equally of matter and anti-matter, but there’s virtually no anti-matter here on Earth or in our solar system. What anti-matter there is comes from high-energy collisions, like those from cosmic rays, and the anti-particles don’t last long.

All of our experiments at atom smashers, along with all our theories tell us the there should be as much anti-matter as matter in our Universe. So where is it? (Credit: Science Notes)

Our observations of the Milky Way also rule out any large amounts of anti-matter in our galaxy. In fact most astronomers think it highly unlikely that there are any anti-matter galaxies within at least 100 million light years. So where is all of the anti-matter, are there anti-matter galaxies anywhere in the observable Universe? That’s one of the big questions it was hoped that AMS-2 would help to answer.

And AMS-2 has provided quite a bit of data that has given physicists a lot to think about. The intensity of anti-electrons for one thing is about five times higher than can be accounted for by established theories. This has raised the possibility that the excess anti-electrons are produced by ‘physics beyond the standard model’ such as the decay of ‘dark matter’ particles.

AMS-2 has also found an excess number of anti-protons in the cosmic ray flux and physicists are trying to determine how well their models predict the number and energy spectrum. Remember single anti-particles are regularly produced in cosmic ray collisions. The big news however has to be the ‘preliminary’ detection of eight anti-helium nuclei. Now because of its importance these detections are being carefully scrutinized, any possible kind of contamination eliminated, nevertheless the data has physicists very excited.

The Anti-Proton to Proton ratio in the primary cosmic rays. There are about one anti-proton for every 10,000 protons but the ratio is pretty flat as a function of energy. (Credit: CERN Document Server)

After all, if the discovery of anti-helium is confirmed that would mean that somewhere in the universe there is an anti-star, a star composed entirely of anti-matter, producing anti-helium by the process of fusion, just as our Sun produces helium by fusing hydrogen. Somewhere, a billion light years or more away, there are anti-galaxies with anti-stars and anti-planets, maybe with anti-people living on them.

Is there an entire Universe composed of anti-matter, and how would we ever know? (Credit: American Physical Society)

Or are they the real people and we’re the anti-people?

Oh, you may have noticed that I’ve haven’t discussed the theories physicists have concerning how cosmic ray particles ever get so much energy. I’m saving that for a later post!

The Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer aboard The International Space Station and its search for an Anti-Atom.

It was some ninety years ago now that physicist Paul Dirac first suggested the existance of anti-matter and only a little more than a year later that another physicist, Carl Anderson observed anti-electrons (he called them positrons) in cosmic rays striking the Earth. In the years since then physicists have not only observed many different anti-particles but actually produced them using particle accelerators like the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. We also know that the collisions of cosmic ray particles in outer space produce single anti-particles because we often observe them as well.

Anti-Matter differs from ordinary Matter by a switching of the charge. (Credit: Popular Mechanics)

In fact all of the experiments we have performed with our particle accelerators, and all of the theories we have developed tell us that there should be exactly as much anti-matter in the Universe as there is matter. The big bang should have produced just as much anti-matter as matter. But there certainly aren’t large amounts of anti-matter, not anywhere around Earth at least.

The logic goes like this: The Earth is made of matter and since the solar wind is in contact with the Earth’s upper atmosphere without causing matter/anti-matter annihilation it must be made of matter as well, so the Sun is made of matter. Since the solar wind is also in contact with everything else in our solar system as well all of the planets; moons and etc must be made of matter just as the Earth is. (Let’s not forget that we have now landed probes on several other bodies so they certainly aren’t anti-matter)

Matter and Anti-Matter annihilate each other producing Energy (Credit: Fandom)

We can even go further because the solar wind reaches out into the interstellar medium where the gas and dust particles must be made of matter or again they would interact with the solar wind. Finally that means that, since all the solar winds from all of the other stars in our galaxy are also in contact with the interstellar medium all of the stars in our galaxy must be made of matter.

What about other galaxies? You may ask. Could there be entire anti-galaxies made of anti-matter out there? And if so, how would we know? That question has been the subject of much debate over the last half a century.

Again, here’s the logic: if anti-galaxies do exist then they must have anti-supernova that produce anti-cosmic ray nuclei just as normal cosmic ray nuclei are produced in our galaxy. Eventually a very few of those anti-cosmic ray nuclei will find their way to Earth and if our scientists could find a single undeniable anti-nucleus that would be strong evidence that there are anti-galaxies with anti-stars out somewhere out there.

That’s the goal of the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS-02) currently operating aboard the International Space Station (ISS). Launched into space by the space shuttle on the 16th of May in 2011 the AMS-02 has been observing cosmic ray particles above our atmosphere now for eight years.

The AMS-02 Mounted on the International Space Station (Credit: NASA)

(By the way, yes there was an APS-01, a Proof-of-Concept model that went into space with the Space Shuttle Discovery in 1998.)

The AMS-02 operates in many ways like one of the detectors at CERN or one of the other high energy physics labs. First ignoring any particles that do not pass from the top to the bottom the AMS-02 measures the time each particle takes passing through, that gives particles velocity. At the bottom the particle then enters a calorimeter which measures the particles energy. Once you know the velocity and energy you can calculate the mass and together they tell you what kind of particle it is.

Breakdown of the Components of the AMS-02 (Credit: NASA)

Finally the whole detector is surrounded by a large permanent magnet. The magnetic field will bend the path of charged particles and if you know what kind of particle it is, and the direction it bends you know whether it’s matter or anti-matter.

AMS-02 has spent the last eight years searching for an anti-helium nucleus and so far found nothing. Physicists feel that this result puts a very strong constraint on the possibility of large amounts of anti-matter existing anywhere in the observable Universe. It really appears that for some reason still unknown the big bang produced only matter, even though much less powerful interactions since then have always produced matter and anti-matter in equal parts.

If you’d like to learn more about the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS-02) click on the link below to be taken to NASA’s webpage for AMS-02.

https://ams.nasa.gov/

There is obviously still a lot to be learned about how our Universe came into being.