An Introductory Account of Cosmic Ray

Jump To References Section

Authors

  • Physics Department, Haripal G D Institution, Hooghiy, West Bengal ,IN

Keywords:

No Keywords.

Abstract

While performing experiment with charged electroscope in 1900 Elster, Geitel and C T R Wilson jointly observed that even if it is left standing on a good insulating stand a charged electroscope gets discharged completely after a certain interval. Although an obvious explanation that came immediately after the observation was that a steady inflow of tiny charged particles coming Irom any external source and penetrating through the container wall reach the diverged leaves and discharge them the exact location and the entity of that external source remained obscure for an appreciably long period of time. By then it was a well icnown fact that there exists a steady potential gradient from the Earth's surface outward in which a small atmospheric current of the order of picoampere persists. But that much of current could not account for the time rate of discharging of the electroscope properly. Henceforth a much stronger external source of electrically charged particles was being searched for. That time there were three distinct possibilities in all, [1-4]

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2005-07-31

How to Cite

Chattopadhyay, R. (2005). An Introductory Account of Cosmic Ray. Indian Science Cruiser, 19(3), 23–38. Retrieved from http://www.informaticsjournals.com/index.php/ISC/article/view/42280

 

References

J. B. Rajam, 'Atomic Physics', S. Chand & Company Ltd. New Delhi, (2000)

S. N. Ghoshal, 'Atomic and Nuclear physics', vol. l&U (2001 &2000) S. Chand & Company Ltd. New Delhi.

Yu. M. Shirokov and N.P. Yudin, 'Nuclear Physics' (vol. I & II) Translated by M. Samokhav, Mir Publisher, Moscow, (1982) 4. The Mc Graw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1992

Le Prince Ringuet L., 'Cosmic Rays', Prentice Hall (1950)

Vallarta, "On The allowed cone of cosmic radiation", Phys. Rev. 74, 1837 (1949)

B. Rossi, "Interpretation of Cosmic Ray , Phenomena", Rev. Mod. phys. 20537 (1949)

E. Fermi, "On the origin of the cosmic radiation", Phys. Rev. 75, 1169-1174 (1949)

J.A. Ratcliffe, "Physics of the Upper Atmosphere", Academic Press, New York (1960)

R. S. Yadav, Badruddin, N. K. Sharma, "Effects of two types of solar-wind streams on cosmic ray intensity" Ind. J. Phys, 68B (1), 9(1994)

E. Rasetti, "Elements of Nuclear Physics", Prentice Hall, (1986)

T. Murayama, K. Maezawa and K. Hakamada, 'Proc. 16th Int. Cosmic Ray Physics' (1949)

R. K. Singh, M. N. Vahia and N. Durgaprasad, "Cosmic Ray Distribution in the Near-earth Space" Phys. Edu. Vol. 12. No. 1 (1995) pp. 44-61

H.A.Bethe, "Elementary Nuclear Theory", Wiley (1947)

G. Srinivasan, V. Radhakrishnan Ed. 'Supernovae, their progenitors and remnants', The India Academy of Sciences, Bangalore (1985)

R. Hanbury Brown Ed. 'Photon Galaxies and Stars', Indian Academy of Sciences, Bangalore (1985)

W.S.Goldberg and M.D. Scadron, 'Physics of Stellar Evolution and Cosmology' Gordon and Breach Science Publishers, New York, (1986)

J. V. Narlikar, "The Primeaval Universe" (1988) and "The Structure of the Universe" (1977), Oxford, New York, Oxford University Press.

G Gamowand C. L. Critchfield. Theory of Atomic Nucleus and Nuclear energy sources; Oxford at the Clarendon press, (1950)

C. Stormer, "Sur les trajectories des corpusculer electrises dans I'espace sous Taction du magnetisme terrestre avec application aux aurores boreales". Arch, sci. phys. et. nat. Geneve, 33,51-69, 113150 (1912).

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 > >>