|
Cosmic
rays originate in out in space.
They
are produced by our Sun (when they are called the solar wind), stars,
supernovae, neutron stars and black holes.
The most well-known
source of cosmic rays is the Sun, with its solar wind. These particles
have a characteristic energy limit and so we know that the super high
energy ones are coming from something more powerful than our Sun.
In 1960 a scientist
called suggested that lower-energy cosmic rays come mainly from inside
our own galaxy (the Milky Way), whereas those of higher energy come from
more distant sources. He expected to see different numbers of low energy
cosmic rays coming from various directions at us from within our galaxy
because the galaxy is not arranged symmetrically around us. He found that
the lower-energy rays had directions are scattered in a similar pattern
and his idea was right.
- They travel
at very fast speed indeed - very close to the speed of light.
- Cosmic rays
are made up from a stream of high-energy particles that are generally
ionised atoms (ions),
ranging from a single proton, up to an iron nucleus and sometimes
an even heavier one!
- When charged
particles move they create a magnetic field (you should know this
from your GCSE electricity work) and because there is a small magnetic
field permeating the Galaxy (and an even smaller field permeating
inter-galactic space) they travel in curved paths as their field interacts
with that around them.
- The earth's
atmosphere protects us from being exposed to many of these particles.
As a cosmic ray enters the atmosphere, it will collide with a particle
in the atmosphere (usually a nitrogen or oxygen molecule) and cause
ionisation of that. The collision produces matter out of the energy
of the cosmic particle (you've heard of Einstein's equation E = mc2
haven't you? .. but this is way beyond the scope of GCSE!) and the
ramifications of that are studied to tell us more about the origins
of the particles.
If you live at
a high altitude or go up in an aeroplane your radiation
dose increases because you are hit by more cosmic rays!
If you live nearer
the poles you will receive a higher dose of cosmic radiation because the
earth surface rotates more quickly at the equator than at the poles. also
the atmosphere is deeper at the equator than at the poles.
Alternatively, as
these particles travel through the atmosphere, they interact with nitrogen
molecules in the atmosphere, exciting the electrons in them and causing
them to emit light (rather like the way a fluorescent light works).
Cosmic rays have been
detected with very high energies, we believe that they originate from
quasars and active galactic nuclei. We do not know where these particles
are coming from but a lot of exciting research is going on in that area.
We have not got detectors that are able to detect cosmic rays of even
higher energy but scientists are sure that super-energy Cosmic rays exist..
we just can't 'see' them with any instrument we have devised yet.
: Useful
URLs :
http://www.sciam.com/0197issue/0197swordy.html
http://www.physics.adelaide.edu.au/astrophysics/cr.html
http://www.pparc.ac.uk/Ps/Psc/intro.asp
http://physicsweb.org/TIPTOP/
|