Are there strangelets in cosmic rays?
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology
2009-11-10 v1 Astrophysics
Abstract
Assuming that cosmic rays entering the Earth's atmosphere contain a small admixture of nuggets of strange quark matter in form of strangelets one can explain a number of apparently "strange" effects observed in different cosmic rays experiments. We shall demonstrate here that the mass spectrum of such strangelets filles the "nuclear desert" gap existing between the heaviest elements observed in Universe and the next "nuclear-like objects" represented by neutron and strange stars.
Cite
@article{arxiv.hep-ph/0410065,
title = {Are there strangelets in cosmic rays?},
author = {M. Rybczynski and Z. Wlodarczyk and G. Wilk},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:hep-ph/0410065},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
Presented at 19th ECRS, Florence, 2004