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The Trans-Iron Galactic Element Recorder for the International Space Station (TIGERISS)

ORAL

Abstract

TIGERISS is an Ultra-Heavy Galactic Cosmic Ray (UHGCR) detector awarded under the second round of the NASA Astrophysics Pioneers program. It will measure the abundances of every element from 5B to 82Pb relative to 26Fe with kinetic energies over 350 MeV/nucleon. TIGERISS is an evolution of the TIGER and SuperTIGER long-duration balloon instruments incorporating detector improvements from our previous Heavy-Nuclei Explorer SMEX, including silicon strip detectors in place of both scintiallator radiators and scintillating fibers. The performance of these new detector components was demonstrated at CERN/SPS beam tests and will provide TIGERISS with high fidelity charge assignment with σZ <0.25. All available ISS external attachment accommodations are currently under study, including those for the JAXA JEM-EF, the ESA Columbus Laboratory, and the NASA ELC. The TIGERISS geometry factor depends on attachment location (~1 to 1.6 m2 sr), but in one year the baseline instrument would obtain statistics comparable to the current SuperTIGER data set and expand measurements to higher and lower atomic numbers. TIGERISS measurements will be cleaner than SuperTIGER’s as they will not require corrections for atmospheric interactions and scintillator saturation effects. They will also give the first single-element resolution measurements of elements above 56Ba that with extended observations would test models for cosmic-ray origins and acceleration. The SuperTIGER UHGCR measurements through 40Zr have supported a model of CR origins in OB Associations with preferential acceleration of refractory elements more likely found in dust grains than volatiles superposed on Z dependence from grain sputtering injection in SN shocks, but more recent results from 41Nb to 56Ba are inconsistent with that model and require a difference in the acceleration mechanism and/or an additional r-process source. These UHGCR observations will cover elements produced in s-process and r-process neutron capture nucleosynthesis, adding to the multi-messenger effort to determine the relative contributions of supernovae (SN) and Neutron Star Merger (NSM) events to r-process nucleosynthesis.

Publication: Krizmanic, J. F., Mitchell, J., Sasaki, M. for the HNX & TIGERISS Collaborations (2017) CERN Test Beam Team Prototype HNX/TIGERISS Silicon Strip Detector Response to Nuclei Measured in a Lead Test Beam, 35th International Cosmic Ray Conference (Busan, Korea), Proceedings of Science, PoS(ICRC2017) 242.<br><br>Rauch, B. F., Walsh, N. E., and Zober, W. V. for the TIGERISS Collaboration (2021) The Trans-Iron Galactic Element Recorder for the International Space Station (TIGERISS), 37th International Cosmic Ray Conference (Berlin, Germany), Proceedings of Science, PoS(ICRC2021) 087, https://pos.sissa.it/395/087/pdf.<br><br>Rauch, B. F., Walsh, N. E., and Zober, W. V. for the TIGERISS Collaboration (2021) Determination of Expected TIGERISS Observations, 37th International Cosmic Ray Conference (Berlin, Germany), Proceedings of Science, PoS(ICRC2021) 088, https://pos.sissa.it/395/088/pdf.

Presenters

  • Brian F Rauch

    Washington University in St. Louis, Washington University, St. Louis

Authors

  • Brian F Rauch

    Washington University in St. Louis, Washington University, St. Louis

  • Wolfgang Zober

    Washington University, St. Louis

  • Michaela Amoo

    Howard University

  • Roberto F Borda

    University of Maryland Baltimore County

  • Richard G Bose

    Washington University in St. Louis

  • Nicholas W Cannady

    UMBC/NASA GSFC/CRESST II

  • Stephane Coutu

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Priyarshini Ghosh

    Catholic University of America/NASA GSFC/CRESST II

  • John F Krizmanic

    NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

  • J. Vanderlei Martins

    University of Maryland Baltimore County

  • Eileen Meyer

    University of Maryland Baltimore County

  • John W W Mitchell

    NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

  • John G Mitchell

    UMCP/NASA GSFC/CRESST II

  • Isaac Mognet

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Scott Nutter

    Northern Kentucky University

  • Kenichi Sakai

    UMBC/NASA GSFC/CRESST II, NASA/GSFC/CRESST/UMBC

  • Makoto Sasaki

    UMCP/NASA GSFC/CRESST II, NASA/GSFC/CRESST/UMCP

  • Sonya Smith

    Howard University

  • Liam P Williams

    KBR/NASA GSFC

  • Alexander A Moiseev

    UMCP/NASA GSFC/CRESST II

  • Georgia A de Nolfo

    NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

  • Michael Mcpherson

    Howard University

  • Harrell A Tolentino

    Howard University

  • Regina M Caputo

    NASA Goddard Space Flight Center