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Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer

The Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS-02) is a particle physics experiment module that is mounted on the International Space Station (ISS).[4] The experiment is a recognized CERN experiment (RE1).[5][6] The module is a detector that measures antimatter in cosmic rays; this information is needed to understand the formation of the Universe and search for evidence of dark matter.

Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer
AMS-02 on the truss, as viewed during an Expedition 50 spacewalk
Module statistics
Part ofInternational Space Station
Launch date16 May 2011 13:56:28 (2011-05-16UTC13:56:28) UTC[1][2][3]
Launch vehicleSpace Shuttle Endeavour
BerthedMay 19, 2011
Mass6,717 kg (14,808 lb)
AMS-02 logo
Computer rendering

The principal investigator is Nobel laureate particle physicist Samuel Ting. The launch of Space Shuttle Endeavour flight STS-134 carrying AMS-02 took place on May 16, 2011, and the spectrometer was installed on May 19, 2011.[7][8] By April 15, 2015, AMS-02 had recorded over 60 billion cosmic ray events[9] and 90 billion after five years of operation since its installation in May 2011.[10]

In March 2013, Professor Ting reported initial results, saying that AMS had observed over 400,000 positrons, with the positron to electron fraction increasing from 10 GeV to 250 GeV. (Later results have shown a decrease in positron fraction at energies over about 275 GeV). There was "no significant variation over time, or any preferred incoming direction. These results are consistent with the positrons originating from the annihilation of dark matter particles in space, but not yet sufficiently conclusive to rule out other explanations." The results have been published in Physical Review Letters.[11] Additional data are still being collected.[11][12][13][14][15][16][17]

History edit

The alpha magnetic spectrometer was proposed in 1995 by the Antimatter Study Group,[18][4] led by MIT particle physicist Samuel Ting, not long after the cancellation of the Superconducting Super Collider. The original name for the instrument was Antimatter Spectrometer,[4][18][19] with the stated objective to search for primordial antimatter, with a target resolution of antimatter/matter ≈10−9.[18][19] The proposal was accepted and Ting became the principal investigator.[20]

AMS-01 edit

 
AMS-01 flew in space in June 1998 aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery on STS-91. It is visible near the rear of the payload bay.
 
A detail view of the AMS-01 module (center) mounted in the shuttle payload bay for the STS-91 mission.

An AMS prototype designated AMS-01, a simplified version of the detector, was built by the international consortium under Ting's direction and flown into space aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery on STS-91 in June 1998. By not detecting any antihelium the AMS-01 established an upper limit of 1.1×10−6 for the antihelium to helium flux ratio[21] and proved that the detector concept worked in space. This shuttle mission was the last shuttle flight to the Mir Space Station.

AMS-02 edit

 
AMS-02 during integration and testing at CERN near Geneva.

After the flight of the prototype, the group, now labelled the AMS Collaboration, began the development of a full research system designated AMS-02. This development effort involved the work of 500 scientists from 56 institutions and 16 countries organized under United States Department of Energy (DOE) sponsorship.

The instrument which eventually resulted from a long evolutionary process has been called "the most sophisticated particle detector ever sent into space", rivaling very large detectors used at major particle accelerators, and has cost four times as much as any of its ground-based counterparts. Its goals have also evolved and been refined over time. As built it is a more comprehensive detector which has a better chance of discovering evidence of dark matter along other goals.[22]

The power requirements for AMS-02 were thought to be too great for a practical independent spacecraft. So AMS-02 was designed to be installed as an external module on the International Space Station and use power from the ISS. The post-Space Shuttle Columbia plan was to deliver AMS-02 to the ISS by space shuttle in 2005 on station assembly mission UF4.1, but technical difficulties and shuttle scheduling issues added more delays.[23]

AMS-02 successfully completed final integration and operational testing at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland which included exposure to energetic proton beams generated by the CERN SPS particle accelerator.[24][25] AMS-02 was then shipped by specialist haulier to ESA's European Space Research and Technology Centre (ESTEC) facility in the Netherlands where it arrived February 16, 2010. Here it underwent thermal vacuum, electromagnetic compatibility and electromagnetic interference testing. AMS-02 was scheduled for delivery to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, United States. in late May 2010.[7] This was however postponed to August 26, as AMS-02 underwent final alignment beam testing at CERN.[26][27]

 
AMS-02 during final alignment testing at CERN just days before being airlifted to Cape Canaveral.
 
Beamline from SPS feeding 20 GeV positrons to AMS for alignment testing at the time of the picture.

A cryogenic, superconducting magnet system was developed for the AMS-02. When the Obama administration extended International Space Station operations beyond 2015, the decision was made by AMS management to exchange the AMS-02 superconducting magnet for the non-superconducting magnet previously flown on AMS-01. Although the non-superconducting magnet has a weaker field strength, its on-orbit operational time at ISS is expected to be 10 to 18 years versus only three years for the superconducting version.[28] In December 2018 it was announced that funding for the ISS had been extended to 2030.[29]

In 1999, after the successful flight of AMS-01, the total cost of the AMS program was estimated to be $33 million, with AMS-02 planned for flight to the ISS in 2003.[30] After the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster in 2003, and after a number of technical difficulties with the construction of AMS-02, the cost of the program ballooned to an estimated $2 billion.[31][32]

Installation on the International Space Station edit

 
A computer generated image showing AMS-02 mounted to the ISS S3 Upper Inboard Payload Attach Site.
 
Location of the AMS on the International Space Station (upper left).
 
AMS-02 installed on the ISS.

For several years it was uncertain if AMS-02 would ever be launched because it was not manifested to fly on any of the remaining Space Shuttle flights.[33] After the 2003 Columbia disaster NASA decided to reduce shuttle flights and retire the remaining shuttles by 2010. A number of flights were removed from the remaining manifest including the flight for AMS-02.[20] In 2006 NASA studied alternative ways of delivering AMS-02 to the space station, but they all proved to be too expensive.[33]

In May 2008 a bill[34] was proposed to launch AMS-02 to ISS on an additional shuttle flight in 2010 or 2011.[35] The bill was passed by the full House of Representatives on June 11, 2008.[36] The bill then went before the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee where it also passed. It was then amended and passed by the full Senate on September 25, 2008, and was passed again by the House on September 27, 2008.[37] It was signed by President George W. Bush on October 15, 2008.[38][39] The bill authorized NASA to add another space shuttle flight to the schedule before the space shuttle program was discontinued. In January 2009 NASA restored AMS-02 to the shuttle manifest. On August 26, 2010, AMS-02 was delivered from CERN to the Kennedy Space Center by a Lockheed C-5 Galaxy.[40]

It was delivered to the International Space Station on May 19, 2011, as part of station assembly flight ULF6 on shuttle flight STS-134, commanded by Mark Kelly.[41] It was removed from the shuttle cargo bay using the shuttle's robotic arm and handed off to the station's robotic arm for installation. AMS-02 is mounted on top of the Integrated Truss Structure, on USS-02, the zenith side of the S3-element of the truss.[42]

Operations, condition and repairs edit

 
ESA astronaut Luca Parmitano, attached to the Canadarm2 robotic arm, carries the new thermal pump system for AMS

By April 2017 only one of the 4 redundant coolant pumps for the silicon trackers was fully working, and repairs were being planned, despite AMS-02 not being designed to be serviced in space.[43][44] By 2019, the last one was being operated intermittently.[44] In November 2019, after four years of planning,[44] special tools and equipment were sent to the ISS for in-situ repairs that may require four or five EVAs.[45] Liquid carbon dioxide coolant was also replenished.[44]

The repairs were conducted by the ISS crew of Expedition 61. The spacewalkers were the expedition commander and ESA astronaut Luca Parmitano, and NASA astronaut Andrew Morgan. Both of them were assisted by NASA astronauts Christina Koch and Jessica Meir who operated the Canadarm2 robotic arm from inside the Station. The spacewalks were described as the "most challenging since [the last] Hubble repairs".[46]

The entire spacewalk campaign was a central feature of the Disney+ docuseries Among The Stars.

First spacewalk edit

The first spacewalk was conducted on November 15, 2019. The spacewalk began with the removal of the debris shield covering AMS, which was jettisoned to burn up in the atmosphere. The next task was to install three handrails in the vicinity of AMS to prepare for the next spacewalks and remove zip ties on the AMS' vertical support strut. This was followed by the "get ahead" tasks: Luca Parmitano removed the screws from a carbon-fibre cover under the insulation and passed the cover to Andrew Morgan to jettison. The spacewalkers also removed the vertical support beam cover. The duration of the spacewalk was 6 hours and 39 minutes.[47][48]

Second spacewalk edit

The second spacewalk was conducted on November 22, 2019. Parmitano and Morgan cut a total of eight stainless steel tubes, including one that vented the remaining carbon dioxide from the old cooling pump. The crew members also prepared a power cable and installed a mechanical attachment device in advance of installing the new cooling system. The duration of the spacewalk was 6 hours and 33 minutes.[49]

Third spacewalk edit

The third spacewalk was conducted on December 2, 2019. The crew completed the primary task of installing the upgraded cooling system, called the upgraded tracker thermal pump system (UTTPS), completed the power and data cable connections for the system, and connected all eight cooling lines from the AMS to the new system. The intricate connection work required making a clean cut for each existing stainless steel tube connected to the AMS, then connecting it to the new system through swaging.[50]

The astronauts also completed an additional task to install an insulating blanket on the nadir side of the AMS to replace the heat shield and blanket they removed during the first spacewalk to begin the repair work. The flight control team on Earth initiated power-up of the system and confirmed its reception of power and data.[50]

The duration of the spacewalk was 6 hours and 2 minutes.[50]

Fourth spacewalk edit

The fourth spacewalk was conducted on January 25, 2020. The astronauts conducted leak checks for the cooling system on the AMS and opened a valve to pressurize the system. Parmitano found a leak in one of the AMS's cooling lines. The leak was fixed during the spacewalk. Preliminary testing showed the AMS was responding as expected.[51][52]

Ground teams worked to fill the new AMS thermal control system with carbon dioxide, allowed the system to stabilize, and powered on the pumps to verify and optimize their performance. The tracker, one of several detectors on the AMS, began collecting science data again before the end of the week after the spacewalk.[51]

The astronauts also completed an additional task to remove degraded lens filters on two high-definition video cameras.[51]

The duration of the spacewalk was 6 hours and 16 minutes.[51]

Specifications edit

  • Mass: 7,500 kilograms (16,500 lb)
  • Structural material: Stainless steel
  • Power: 2,500 W
  • Internal data rate: 7 Gbit/s
  • Data rate to ground: 2 Mbit/s (typical, average)[53]
  • Primary mission duration: 10 to 18 years
  • Design life: 3 years.[44]
  • Magnetic field intensity: 0.15 teslas produced by a 1,200 kilograms (2,600 lb) permanent neodymium magnet[53]
  • Original superconducting magnet: 2 coils of niobium-titanium at 1.8 K producing a central field of 0.87 teslas[54] (Not used in the actual device)
  • AMS-02 flight magnet changed to non-superconducting AMS-01 version to extend experiment life and to solve reliability problems in the operation of the superconducting system

About 1,000 cosmic rays are recorded by the instrument per second, generating about one GB/sec of data. This data is filtered and compressed to about 300 kbit/s for download to the operation center POCC at CERN.

A mockup of the machine is present inside the operations center at CERN.

Design edit

The detector module consists of a series of detectors that are used to determine various characteristics of the radiation and particles as they pass through. Characteristics are determined only for particles that pass through from top to bottom. Particles that enter the detector at any other angles are rejected. From top to bottom the subsystems are identified as:[55]

  • Transition radiation detector measures the velocities of the highest energy particles;
  • Upper time of flight counter, along with the lower time of flight counter, measures the velocities of lower energy particles;
  • Star tracker determines the orientation of the module in space;
  • Silicon tracker (9 disks among 6 locations) measures the coordinates of charged particles in the magnetic field;
    • Has 4 redundant coolant pumps
  • Permanent magnet bends the path of charged particles so they can be identified;
  • Anti-coincidence counter rejects stray particles that enter through the sides;
  • Ring imaging Cherenkov detector measures velocity of fast particles with extreme accuracy;
  • Electromagnetic calorimeter measures the total energy of the particles.

Scientific goals edit

The AMS-02 will use the unique environment of space to advance knowledge of the Universe and lead to the understanding of its origin by searching for antimatter, dark matter and measuring cosmic rays.[42]

Antimatter edit

Experimental evidence indicates that our galaxy is made of matter; however, scientists believe there are about 100–200 billion galaxies in the observable Universe and some versions of the Big Bang theory of the origin of the Universe require equal amounts of matter and antimatter. Theories that explain this apparent asymmetry violate other measurements. Whether or not there is significant antimatter is one of the fundamental questions of the origin and nature of the Universe. Any observations of an antihelium nucleus would provide evidence for the existence of antimatter in space. In 1999, AMS-01 established a new upper limit of 10−6 for the antihelium/helium flux ratio in the Universe. AMS-02 was designed to search with a sensitivity of 10−9,[19] an improvement of three orders of magnitude over AMS-01, sufficient to reach the edge of the expanding Universe and resolve the issue definitively.

Dark matter edit

The visible matter in the Universe, such as stars, adds up to less than 5 percent of the total mass that is known to exist from many other observations. The other 95 percent is dark, either dark matter, which is estimated at 20 percent of the Universe by weight, or dark energy, which makes up the balance. The exact nature of both still is unknown. One of the leading candidates for dark matter is the neutralino. If neutralinos exist, they should be colliding with each other and giving off an excess of charged particles that can be detected by AMS-02. Any peaks in the background positron, antiproton, or gamma ray flux could signal the presence of neutralinos or other dark matter candidates, but would need to be distinguished from poorly known confounding astrophysical signals.

Strangelets edit

Six types of quarks (up, down, strange, charm, bottom and top) have been found experimentally; however, the majority of matter on Earth is made up of only up and down quarks. It is a fundamental question whether there exists stable matter made up of strange quarks in combination with up and down quarks. Particles of such matter are known as strangelets. Strangelets might have extremely large mass and very small charge-to-mass ratios. It would be a totally new form of matter. AMS-02 may determine whether this extraordinary matter exists in our local environment.

Space radiation environment edit

Cosmic radiation during transit is a significant obstacle to sending humans to Mars. Accurate measurements of the cosmic ray environment are needed to plan appropriate countermeasures. Most cosmic ray studies are done by balloon-borne instruments with flight times that are measured in days; these studies have shown significant variations. AMS-02 is operative on the ISS, gathering a large amount of accurate data and allowing measurements of the long term variation of the cosmic ray flux over a wide energy range, for nuclei from protons to iron. In addition to understanding the radiation protection required for astronauts during interplanetary flight, this data will allow the interstellar propagation and origins of cosmic rays to be identified.

Results edit

In July 2012, it was reported that AMS-02 had observed over 18 billion cosmic rays.[56]

In February 2013, Samuel Ting reported that in its first 18 months of operation AMS had recorded 25 billion particle events including nearly eight billion fast electrons and positrons.[57] The AMS paper reported the positron-electron ratio in the mass range of 0.5 to 350 GeV, providing evidence about the weakly interacting massive particle (WIMP) model of dark matter.

On March 30, 2013, the first results from the AMS experiment were announced by the CERN press office.[11][12][13][14][15][16][58] The first physics results were published in Physical Review Letters on April 3, 2013.[11] A total of 6.8×106 positron and electron events were collected in the energy range from 0.5 to 350 GeV. The positron fraction (of the total electron plus positron events) steadily increased from energies of 10 to 250  GeV, but the slope decreased by an order of magnitude above 20 GeV, even though the fraction of positrons still increased. There was no fine structure in the positron fraction spectrum, and no anisotropies were observed. The accompanying Physics Viewpoint[59] said that "The first results from the space-borne Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer confirm an unexplained excess of high-energy positrons in Earth-bound cosmic rays." These results are consistent with the positrons originating from the annihilation of dark matter particles in space, but not yet sufficiently conclusive to rule out other explanations. Ting said "Over the coming months, AMS will be able to tell us conclusively whether these positrons are a signal for dark matter, or whether they have some other origin."[60]

On September 18, 2014, new results with almost twice as much data were presented in a talk at CERN and published in Physical Review Letters.[61][62][63] A new measurement of positron fraction up to 500 GeV was reported, showing that positron fraction peaks at a maximum of about 16% of total electron+positron events, around an energy of 275 ± 32 GeV. At higher energies, up to 500 GeV, the ratio of positrons to electrons begins to fall again.

AMS presented for 3 days at CERN in April 2015, covering new data on 300 million proton events and helium flux.[64] It revealed in December 2016 that it had discovered a few signals consistent with antihelium nuclei amidst several billion helium nuclei. The result remains to be verified, and the team is currently trying to rule out contamination.[65]

A study from 2019, using data from NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope discovered a halo around the nearby pulsar Geminga. The accelerated electrons and positrons collide with nearby starlight. The collision boosts the light up to much higher energies. Geminga alone could be responsible for as much as 20% of the high-energy positrons seen by the AMS-02 experiment.[66] The AMS-02 on the ISS has, as of 2021, recorded eight events that seem to indicate the detection of antihelium-3.[67][68]

Over a twelve-year period aboard the ISS, the AMS has accumulated a dataset comprising more than 230 billion cosmic rays, spanning energies reaching multi-TeV levels. The precise measurements obtained by the magnetic spectrometer enable data presentation with an accuracy approaching ~1%. Particularly significant is the high-energy data regarding elementary particles such as electrons, positrons, protons, and antiprotons, which presents challenges to current theoretical frameworks. Additionally, observations of nuclei and isotopes reveal energy dependencies that deviate from theoretical predictions. The extensive dataset collected by AMS necessitates a reevaluation of existing models of the cosmos, as discussed at the APS April meeting in 2024.[69]

See also edit

References edit

  This article incorporates public domain material from AMS project page. National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

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Further reading edit

  • AMS Collaboration (2011). "Isotopic Composition of Light Nuclei in Cosmic Rays: Results from AMS-01". Astrophys. J. 736 (2): 105. arXiv:1106.2269. Bibcode:2011ApJ...736..105A. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/736/2/105. S2CID 119237635.
  • AMS Collaboration (2010). "Relative Composition and Energy Spectra of Light Nuclei in Cosmic Rays. Results from AMS-01". Astrophys. J. 724 (1): 329–340. arXiv:1008.5051. Bibcode:2010ApJ...724..329A. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/724/1/329. S2CID 15550326.
  • AMS Collaboration (2007). "Cosmic-ray positron fraction measurement from 1 to 30-GeV with AMS-01". Phys. Lett. B. 646 (4): 145–154. arXiv:astro-ph/0703154. Bibcode:2007PhLB..646..145A. doi:10.1016/j.physletb.2007.01.024. S2CID 14042669.
  • AMS Collaboration (2005). "A study of cosmic-ray secondaries induced by the MIR Space Station using AMS-01". Nuclear Instruments and Methods B. 234 (3): 321–332. arXiv:hep-ex/0406065. Bibcode:2005NIMPB.234..321A. doi:10.1016/j.nimb.2005.01.015. S2CID 119501638.
  • AMS Collaboration (2002). "The AMS on the ISS. Part I - Results from the test flight on the Space Shuttle". Physics Reports. 366 (6): 331–405. Bibcode:2002PhR...366..331A. doi:10.1016/S0370-1573(02)00013-3. S2CID 122726107.
  • AMS Collaboration (2000). "Helium in near Earth orbit". Phys. Lett. B. 494 (3–4): 193–202. Bibcode:2000PhLB..494..193A. doi:10.1016/S0370-2693(00)01193-X.
  • AMS Collaboration (2000). "Cosmic Protons". Phys. Lett. B. 490 (1–2): 27–35. Bibcode:2000PhLB..490...27A. doi:10.1016/S0370-2693(00)00970-9.
  • AMS Collaboration (2000). "Leptons in near earth orbit" (PDF). Phys. Lett. B. 484 (1–2): 10–22. Bibcode:2000PhLB..484...10A. doi:10.1016/S0370-2693(00)00588-8.
  • AMS Collaboration (2000). "Protons in near earth orbit". Phys. Lett. B. 472 (1–2): 215–226. arXiv:hep-ex/0002049. Bibcode:2000PhLB..472..215A. doi:10.1016/S0370-2693(99)01427-6.
  • AMS Collaboration (1999). "Search for anti-helium in cosmic rays". Phys. Lett. B. 461 (4): 387–396. arXiv:hep-ex/0002048. Bibcode:1999PhLB..461..387A. doi:10.1016/S0370-2693(99)00874-6. S2CID 119401739.
  • Sandweiss, J. (2004). "Overview of strangelet searches and Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer: when will we stop searching?". Journal of Physics G: Nuclear and Particle Physics. 30 (1): S51–S59. Bibcode:2004JPhG...30S..51S. doi:10.1088/0954-3899/30/1/004.

External links edit

  • AMS Collaboration Homepage
  • AMS Homepage at CERN. Inc. construction diagrams.
  • AMS Homepage July 30, 2009, at the Wayback Machine at the Johnson Space Center
  • NASA AMS-02 Project Home Page with real-time cosmic ray count
  • An animated movie of the STS-134 mission showing the installation of AMS-02 (72 MB) May 11, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  • Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer – image collection – AMS-02 on Facebook
  • A Costly Quest for the Dark Heart of the Cosmos (New York Times, 16 November 2010)
  • Route To Space Alliance - European Transport for The Space and Aeronautic Industries
  • Record for AMS-02 experiment on INSPIRE-HEP
  • Record for AMS-01 experiment on INSPIRE-HEP

alpha, magnetic, spectrometer, particle, physics, experiment, module, that, mounted, international, space, station, experiment, recognized, cern, experiment, module, detector, that, measures, antimatter, cosmic, rays, this, information, needed, understand, for. The Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer AMS 02 is a particle physics experiment module that is mounted on the International Space Station ISS 4 The experiment is a recognized CERN experiment RE1 5 6 The module is a detector that measures antimatter in cosmic rays this information is needed to understand the formation of the Universe and search for evidence of dark matter Alpha Magnetic SpectrometerAMS 02 on the truss as viewed during an Expedition 50 spacewalkModule statisticsPart ofInternational Space StationLaunch date16 May 2011 13 56 28 2011 05 16UTC13 56 28 UTC 1 2 3 Launch vehicleSpace Shuttle EndeavourBerthedMay 19 2011Mass6 717 kg 14 808 lb AMS 02 logo Computer rendering The principal investigator is Nobel laureate particle physicist Samuel Ting The launch of Space Shuttle Endeavour flight STS 134 carrying AMS 02 took place on May 16 2011 and the spectrometer was installed on May 19 2011 7 8 By April 15 2015 AMS 02 had recorded over 60 billion cosmic ray events 9 and 90 billion after five years of operation since its installation in May 2011 10 In March 2013 Professor Ting reported initial results saying that AMS had observed over 400 000 positrons with the positron to electron fraction increasing from 10 GeV to 250 GeV Later results have shown a decrease in positron fraction at energies over about 275 GeV There was no significant variation over time or any preferred incoming direction These results are consistent with the positrons originating from the annihilation of dark matter particles in space but not yet sufficiently conclusive to rule out other explanations The results have been published in Physical Review Letters 11 Additional data are still being collected 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Contents 1 History 1 1 AMS 01 1 2 AMS 02 1 3 Installation on the International Space Station 1 4 Operations condition and repairs 1 4 1 First spacewalk 1 4 2 Second spacewalk 1 4 3 Third spacewalk 1 4 4 Fourth spacewalk 2 Specifications 3 Design 4 Scientific goals 4 1 Antimatter 4 2 Dark matter 4 3 Strangelets 4 4 Space radiation environment 5 Results 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editThe alpha magnetic spectrometer was proposed in 1995 by the Antimatter Study Group 18 4 led by MIT particle physicist Samuel Ting not long after the cancellation of the Superconducting Super Collider The original name for the instrument was Antimatter Spectrometer 4 18 19 with the stated objective to search for primordial antimatter with a target resolution of antimatter matter 10 9 18 19 The proposal was accepted and Ting became the principal investigator 20 AMS 01 edit nbsp AMS 01 flew in space in June 1998 aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery on STS 91 It is visible near the rear of the payload bay nbsp A detail view of the AMS 01 module center mounted in the shuttle payload bay for the STS 91 mission An AMS prototype designated AMS 01 a simplified version of the detector was built by the international consortium under Ting s direction and flown into space aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery on STS 91 in June 1998 By not detecting any antihelium the AMS 01 established an upper limit of 1 1 10 6 for the antihelium to helium flux ratio 21 and proved that the detector concept worked in space This shuttle mission was the last shuttle flight to the Mir Space Station AMS 02 edit nbsp AMS 02 during integration and testing at CERN near Geneva After the flight of the prototype the group now labelled the AMS Collaboration began the development of a full research system designated AMS 02 This development effort involved the work of 500 scientists from 56 institutions and 16 countries organized under United States Department of Energy DOE sponsorship The instrument which eventually resulted from a long evolutionary process has been called the most sophisticated particle detector ever sent into space rivaling very large detectors used at major particle accelerators and has cost four times as much as any of its ground based counterparts Its goals have also evolved and been refined over time As built it is a more comprehensive detector which has a better chance of discovering evidence of dark matter along other goals 22 The power requirements for AMS 02 were thought to be too great for a practical independent spacecraft So AMS 02 was designed to be installed as an external module on the International Space Station and use power from the ISS The post Space Shuttle Columbia plan was to deliver AMS 02 to the ISS by space shuttle in 2005 on station assembly mission UF4 1 but technical difficulties and shuttle scheduling issues added more delays 23 AMS 02 successfully completed final integration and operational testing at CERN in Geneva Switzerland which included exposure to energetic proton beams generated by the CERN SPS particle accelerator 24 25 AMS 02 was then shipped by specialist haulier to ESA s European Space Research and Technology Centre ESTEC facility in the Netherlands where it arrived February 16 2010 Here it underwent thermal vacuum electromagnetic compatibility and electromagnetic interference testing AMS 02 was scheduled for delivery to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida United States in late May 2010 7 This was however postponed to August 26 as AMS 02 underwent final alignment beam testing at CERN 26 27 nbsp AMS 02 during final alignment testing at CERN just days before being airlifted to Cape Canaveral nbsp Beamline from SPS feeding 20 GeV positrons to AMS for alignment testing at the time of the picture A cryogenic superconducting magnet system was developed for the AMS 02 When the Obama administration extended International Space Station operations beyond 2015 the decision was made by AMS management to exchange the AMS 02 superconducting magnet for the non superconducting magnet previously flown on AMS 01 Although the non superconducting magnet has a weaker field strength its on orbit operational time at ISS is expected to be 10 to 18 years versus only three years for the superconducting version 28 In December 2018 it was announced that funding for the ISS had been extended to 2030 29 In 1999 after the successful flight of AMS 01 the total cost of the AMS program was estimated to be 33 million with AMS 02 planned for flight to the ISS in 2003 30 After the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster in 2003 and after a number of technical difficulties with the construction of AMS 02 the cost of the program ballooned to an estimated 2 billion 31 32 Installation on the International Space Station edit nbsp A computer generated image showing AMS 02 mounted to the ISS S3 Upper Inboard Payload Attach Site nbsp Location of the AMS on the International Space Station upper left nbsp AMS 02 installed on the ISS For several years it was uncertain if AMS 02 would ever be launched because it was not manifested to fly on any of the remaining Space Shuttle flights 33 After the 2003 Columbia disaster NASA decided to reduce shuttle flights and retire the remaining shuttles by 2010 A number of flights were removed from the remaining manifest including the flight for AMS 02 20 In 2006 NASA studied alternative ways of delivering AMS 02 to the space station but they all proved to be too expensive 33 In May 2008 a bill 34 was proposed to launch AMS 02 to ISS on an additional shuttle flight in 2010 or 2011 35 The bill was passed by the full House of Representatives on June 11 2008 36 The bill then went before the Senate Commerce Science and Transportation Committee where it also passed It was then amended and passed by the full Senate on September 25 2008 and was passed again by the House on September 27 2008 37 It was signed by President George W Bush on October 15 2008 38 39 The bill authorized NASA to add another space shuttle flight to the schedule before the space shuttle program was discontinued In January 2009 NASA restored AMS 02 to the shuttle manifest On August 26 2010 AMS 02 was delivered from CERN to the Kennedy Space Center by a Lockheed C 5 Galaxy 40 It was delivered to the International Space Station on May 19 2011 as part of station assembly flight ULF6 on shuttle flight STS 134 commanded by Mark Kelly 41 It was removed from the shuttle cargo bay using the shuttle s robotic arm and handed off to the station s robotic arm for installation AMS 02 is mounted on top of the Integrated Truss Structure on USS 02 the zenith side of the S3 element of the truss 42 Operations condition and repairs edit nbsp ESA astronaut Luca Parmitano attached to the Canadarm2 robotic arm carries the new thermal pump system for AMS By April 2017 only one of the 4 redundant coolant pumps for the silicon trackers was fully working and repairs were being planned despite AMS 02 not being designed to be serviced in space 43 44 By 2019 the last one was being operated intermittently 44 In November 2019 after four years of planning 44 special tools and equipment were sent to the ISS for in situ repairs that may require four or five EVAs 45 Liquid carbon dioxide coolant was also replenished 44 The repairs were conducted by the ISS crew of Expedition 61 The spacewalkers were the expedition commander and ESA astronaut Luca Parmitano and NASA astronaut Andrew Morgan Both of them were assisted by NASA astronauts Christina Koch and Jessica Meir who operated the Canadarm2 robotic arm from inside the Station The spacewalks were described as the most challenging since the last Hubble repairs 46 The entire spacewalk campaign was a central feature of the Disney docuseries Among The Stars First spacewalk edit The first spacewalk was conducted on November 15 2019 The spacewalk began with the removal of the debris shield covering AMS which was jettisoned to burn up in the atmosphere The next task was to install three handrails in the vicinity of AMS to prepare for the next spacewalks and remove zip ties on the AMS vertical support strut This was followed by the get ahead tasks Luca Parmitano removed the screws from a carbon fibre cover under the insulation and passed the cover to Andrew Morgan to jettison The spacewalkers also removed the vertical support beam cover The duration of the spacewalk was 6 hours and 39 minutes 47 48 Second spacewalk edit The second spacewalk was conducted on November 22 2019 Parmitano and Morgan cut a total of eight stainless steel tubes including one that vented the remaining carbon dioxide from the old cooling pump The crew members also prepared a power cable and installed a mechanical attachment device in advance of installing the new cooling system The duration of the spacewalk was 6 hours and 33 minutes 49 Third spacewalk edit The third spacewalk was conducted on December 2 2019 The crew completed the primary task of installing the upgraded cooling system called the upgraded tracker thermal pump system UTTPS completed the power and data cable connections for the system and connected all eight cooling lines from the AMS to the new system The intricate connection work required making a clean cut for each existing stainless steel tube connected to the AMS then connecting it to the new system through swaging 50 The astronauts also completed an additional task to install an insulating blanket on the nadir side of the AMS to replace the heat shield and blanket they removed during the first spacewalk to begin the repair work The flight control team on Earth initiated power up of the system and confirmed its reception of power and data 50 The duration of the spacewalk was 6 hours and 2 minutes 50 Fourth spacewalk edit The fourth spacewalk was conducted on January 25 2020 The astronauts conducted leak checks for the cooling system on the AMS and opened a valve to pressurize the system Parmitano found a leak in one of the AMS s cooling lines The leak was fixed during the spacewalk Preliminary testing showed the AMS was responding as expected 51 52 Ground teams worked to fill the new AMS thermal control system with carbon dioxide allowed the system to stabilize and powered on the pumps to verify and optimize their performance The tracker one of several detectors on the AMS began collecting science data again before the end of the week after the spacewalk 51 The astronauts also completed an additional task to remove degraded lens filters on two high definition video cameras 51 The duration of the spacewalk was 6 hours and 16 minutes 51 Specifications editMass 7 500 kilograms 16 500 lb Structural material Stainless steel Power 2 500 W Internal data rate 7 Gbit s Data rate to ground 2 Mbit s typical average 53 Primary mission duration 10 to 18 years Design life 3 years 44 Magnetic field intensity 0 15 teslas produced by a 1 200 kilograms 2 600 lb permanent neodymium magnet 53 Original superconducting magnet 2 coils of niobium titanium at 1 8 K producing a central field of 0 87 teslas 54 Not used in the actual device AMS 02 flight magnet changed to non superconducting AMS 01 version to extend experiment life and to solve reliability problems in the operation of the superconducting system About 1 000 cosmic rays are recorded by the instrument per second generating about one GB sec of data This data is filtered and compressed to about 300 kbit s for download to the operation center POCC at CERN A mockup of the machine is present inside the operations center at CERN Design editThe detector module consists of a series of detectors that are used to determine various characteristics of the radiation and particles as they pass through Characteristics are determined only for particles that pass through from top to bottom Particles that enter the detector at any other angles are rejected From top to bottom the subsystems are identified as 55 Transition radiation detector measures the velocities of the highest energy particles Upper time of flight counter along with the lower time of flight counter measures the velocities of lower energy particles Star tracker determines the orientation of the module in space Silicon tracker 9 disks among 6 locations measures the coordinates of charged particles in the magnetic field Has 4 redundant coolant pumps Permanent magnet bends the path of charged particles so they can be identified Anti coincidence counter rejects stray particles that enter through the sides Ring imaging Cherenkov detector measures velocity of fast particles with extreme accuracy Electromagnetic calorimeter measures the total energy of the particles Scientific goals editThe AMS 02 will use the unique environment of space to advance knowledge of the Universe and lead to the understanding of its origin by searching for antimatter dark matter and measuring cosmic rays 42 Antimatter edit See also Antimatter Experimental evidence indicates that our galaxy is made of matter however scientists believe there are about 100 200 billion galaxies in the observable Universe and some versions of the Big Bang theory of the origin of the Universe require equal amounts of matter and antimatter Theories that explain this apparent asymmetry violate other measurements Whether or not there is significant antimatter is one of the fundamental questions of the origin and nature of the Universe Any observations of an antihelium nucleus would provide evidence for the existence of antimatter in space In 1999 AMS 01 established a new upper limit of 10 6 for the antihelium helium flux ratio in the Universe AMS 02 was designed to search with a sensitivity of 10 9 19 an improvement of three orders of magnitude over AMS 01 sufficient to reach the edge of the expanding Universe and resolve the issue definitively Dark matter edit See also Dark matter The visible matter in the Universe such as stars adds up to less than 5 percent of the total mass that is known to exist from many other observations The other 95 percent is dark either dark matter which is estimated at 20 percent of the Universe by weight or dark energy which makes up the balance The exact nature of both still is unknown One of the leading candidates for dark matter is the neutralino If neutralinos exist they should be colliding with each other and giving off an excess of charged particles that can be detected by AMS 02 Any peaks in the background positron antiproton or gamma ray flux could signal the presence of neutralinos or other dark matter candidates but would need to be distinguished from poorly known confounding astrophysical signals Strangelets edit See also Strangelet Six types of quarks up down strange charm bottom and top have been found experimentally however the majority of matter on Earth is made up of only up and down quarks It is a fundamental question whether there exists stable matter made up of strange quarks in combination with up and down quarks Particles of such matter are known as strangelets Strangelets might have extremely large mass and very small charge to mass ratios It would be a totally new form of matter AMS 02 may determine whether this extraordinary matter exists in our local environment Space radiation environment edit Cosmic radiation during transit is a significant obstacle to sending humans to Mars Accurate measurements of the cosmic ray environment are needed to plan appropriate countermeasures Most cosmic ray studies are done by balloon borne instruments with flight times that are measured in days these studies have shown significant variations AMS 02 is operative on the ISS gathering a large amount of accurate data and allowing measurements of the long term variation of the cosmic ray flux over a wide energy range for nuclei from protons to iron In addition to understanding the radiation protection required for astronauts during interplanetary flight this data will allow the interstellar propagation and origins of cosmic rays to be identified Results editThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information April 2024 In July 2012 it was reported that AMS 02 had observed over 18 billion cosmic rays 56 In February 2013 Samuel Ting reported that in its first 18 months of operation AMS had recorded 25 billion particle events including nearly eight billion fast electrons and positrons 57 The AMS paper reported the positron electron ratio in the mass range of 0 5 to 350 GeV providing evidence about the weakly interacting massive particle WIMP model of dark matter On March 30 2013 the first results from the AMS experiment were announced by the CERN press office 11 12 13 14 15 16 58 The first physics results were published in Physical Review Letters on April 3 2013 11 A total of 6 8 106 positron and electron events were collected in the energy range from 0 5 to 350 GeV The positron fraction of the total electron plus positron events steadily increased from energies of 10 to 250 GeV but the slope decreased by an order of magnitude above 20 GeV even though the fraction of positrons still increased There was no fine structure in the positron fraction spectrum and no anisotropies were observed The accompanying Physics Viewpoint 59 said that The first results from the space borne Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer confirm an unexplained excess of high energy positrons in Earth bound cosmic rays These results are consistent with the positrons originating from the annihilation of dark matter particles in space but not yet sufficiently conclusive to rule out other explanations Ting said Over the coming months AMS will be able to tell us conclusively whether these positrons are a signal for dark matter or whether they have some other origin 60 On September 18 2014 new results with almost twice as much data were presented in a talk at CERN and published in Physical Review Letters 61 62 63 A new measurement of positron fraction up to 500 GeV was reported showing that positron fraction peaks at a maximum of about 16 of total electron positron events around an energy of 275 32 GeV At higher energies up to 500 GeV the ratio of positrons to electrons begins to fall again AMS presented for 3 days at CERN in April 2015 covering new data on 300 million proton events and helium flux 64 It revealed in December 2016 that it had discovered a few signals consistent with antihelium nuclei amidst several billion helium nuclei The result remains to be verified and the team is currently trying to rule out contamination 65 A study from 2019 using data from NASA s Fermi Gamma ray Space Telescope discovered a halo around the nearby pulsar Geminga The accelerated electrons and positrons collide with nearby starlight The collision boosts the light up to much higher energies Geminga alone could be responsible for as much as 20 of the high energy positrons seen by the AMS 02 experiment 66 The AMS 02 on the ISS has as of 2021 recorded eight events that seem to indicate the detection of antihelium 3 67 68 Over a twelve year period aboard the ISS the AMS has accumulated a dataset comprising more than 230 billion cosmic rays spanning energies reaching multi TeV levels The precise measurements obtained by the magnetic spectrometer enable data presentation with an accuracy approaching 1 Particularly significant is the high energy data regarding elementary particles such as electrons positrons protons and antiprotons which presents challenges to current theoretical frameworks Additionally observations of nuclei and isotopes reveal energy dependencies that deviate from theoretical predictions The extensive dataset collected by AMS necessitates a reevaluation of existing models of the cosmos as discussed at the APS April meeting in 2024 69 See also edit nbsp Spaceflight portal List of space telescopes Astronomical Space Observatories Payload for Antimatter Matter Exploration and Light nuclei Astrophysics PAMELA an Italian international cosmic ray mission launched in 2006 with similar goals Scientific research on the ISSReferences edit nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from AMS project page National Aeronautics and Space Administration Moskowitz Clara April 29 2011 NASA 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Spectrometer to release first results BBC News Online Retrieved February 18 2013 First result from the AMS experiment CERN press office March 30 2013 Archived from the original on April 7 2013 Retrieved April 3 2013 Coutu S 2013 Positrons Galore Physics Vol 6 p 40 Bibcode 2013PhyOJ 6 40C doi 10 1103 Physics 6 40 AMS experiment measures antimatter excess in space L Accardo AMS Collaboration September 18 2014 High Statistics Measurement of the Positron Fraction in Primary Cosmic Rays of 0 5 500 GeV with the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer on the International Space Station PDF Physical Review Letters 113 12 121101 Bibcode 2014PhRvL 113l1101A doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 113 121101 PMID 25279616 New results from the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer on the International Space Station PDF AMS 02 at NASA Retrieved September 21 2014 Schirber Michael 2014 Synopsis More Dark Matter Hints from Cosmic Rays Physical Review Letters 113 12 121102 arXiv 1701 07305 Bibcode 2014PhRvL 113l1102A doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 113 121102 hdl 1721 1 90426 PMID 25279617 S2CID 2585508 Physics community to discuss latest results of the AMS experiment CERN press office press web cern ch Retrieved July 23 2015 Joshua Sokol April 2017 Giant space magnet may have trapped antihelium raising idea of lingering pools of antimatter in the cosmos Science doi 10 1126 science aal1067 Garner Rob December 19 2019 Fermi Links Nearby Pulsar s Gamma ray Halo to Antimatter Puzzle NASA Retrieved January 26 2020 Leah Crane May 1 2021 Antimatter stars may lurk in the solar system s neighbourhood New Scientist Joshua Sokol April 19 2017 Giant space magnet may have trapped antihelium raising idea of lingering pools of antimatter in the cosmos Science doi 10 1126 science aal1067 APS APS April Meeting 2024 Event Latest Results from the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer on the International Space Station Bulletin of the American Physical Society American Physical Society Further reading editAMS Collaboration 2011 Isotopic Composition of Light Nuclei in Cosmic Rays Results from AMS 01 Astrophys J 736 2 105 arXiv 1106 2269 Bibcode 2011ApJ 736 105A doi 10 1088 0004 637X 736 2 105 S2CID 119237635 AMS Collaboration 2010 Relative Composition and Energy Spectra of Light Nuclei in Cosmic Rays Results from AMS 01 Astrophys J 724 1 329 340 arXiv 1008 5051 Bibcode 2010ApJ 724 329A doi 10 1088 0004 637X 724 1 329 S2CID 15550326 AMS Collaboration 2007 Cosmic ray positron fraction measurement from 1 to 30 GeV with AMS 01 Phys Lett B 646 4 145 154 arXiv astro ph 0703154 Bibcode 2007PhLB 646 145A doi 10 1016 j physletb 2007 01 024 S2CID 14042669 AMS Collaboration 2005 A study of cosmic ray secondaries induced by the MIR Space Station using AMS 01 Nuclear Instruments and Methods B 234 3 321 332 arXiv hep ex 0406065 Bibcode 2005NIMPB 234 321A doi 10 1016 j nimb 2005 01 015 S2CID 119501638 AMS Collaboration 2002 The AMS on the ISS Part I Results from the test flight on the Space Shuttle Physics Reports 366 6 331 405 Bibcode 2002PhR 366 331A doi 10 1016 S0370 1573 02 00013 3 S2CID 122726107 AMS Collaboration 2000 Helium in near Earth orbit Phys Lett B 494 3 4 193 202 Bibcode 2000PhLB 494 193A doi 10 1016 S0370 2693 00 01193 X AMS Collaboration 2000 Cosmic Protons Phys Lett B 490 1 2 27 35 Bibcode 2000PhLB 490 27A doi 10 1016 S0370 2693 00 00970 9 AMS Collaboration 2000 Leptons in near earth orbit PDF Phys Lett B 484 1 2 10 22 Bibcode 2000PhLB 484 10A doi 10 1016 S0370 2693 00 00588 8 AMS Collaboration 2000 Protons in near earth orbit Phys Lett B 472 1 2 215 226 arXiv hep ex 0002049 Bibcode 2000PhLB 472 215A doi 10 1016 S0370 2693 99 01427 6 AMS Collaboration 1999 Search for anti helium in cosmic rays Phys Lett B 461 4 387 396 arXiv hep ex 0002048 Bibcode 1999PhLB 461 387A doi 10 1016 S0370 2693 99 00874 6 S2CID 119401739 Sandweiss J 2004 Overview of strangelet searches and Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer when will we stop searching Journal of Physics G Nuclear and Particle Physics 30 1 S51 S59 Bibcode 2004JPhG 30S 51S doi 10 1088 0954 3899 30 1 004 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer AMS Collaboration Homepage AMS Homepage at CERN Inc construction diagrams AMS Homepage Archived July 30 2009 at the Wayback Machine at the Johnson Space Center NASA AMS 02 Project Fact Sheet NASA AMS 02 Project Home Page with real time cosmic ray count An animated movie of the STS 134 mission showing the installation of AMS 02 72 MB Archived May 11 2011 at the Wayback Machine Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer image collection AMS 02 on Facebook A Costly Quest for the Dark Heart of the Cosmos New York Times 16 November 2010 Route To Space Alliance European Transport for The Space and Aeronautic Industries Record for AMS 02 experiment on INSPIRE HEP Record for AMS 01 experiment on INSPIRE HEP Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer amp oldid 1220776873, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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