The Heavy Nuclei eXplorer (HNX) Small Explorer Mission

ORAL

Abstract

The Heavy Nuclei eXplorer (HNX) will investigate the nature of the reservoirs of nuclei at the cosmic-ray sources, the mechanisms by which nuclei are removed from the reservoirs and injected into the cosmic accelerators, and the acceleration mechanism. HNX will use two large high-precision instruments, the Extremely-heavy Cosmic-ray Composition Observer (ECCO) and the Cosmic-ray Trans-Iron Galactic Element Recorder (CosmicTIGER), flying in the SpaceX DragonLab, to measure, for the first time, the abundance of every individual element in the periodic table from carbon through the actinides, providing the first measurement of many of these elements. HNX will measure several thousand ultra-heavy galactic cosmic ray (UHGCR) nuclei Z$\ge $30, including about 50 actinides, and will: determine whether GCRs are accelerated from new or old material, and find their age; measure the mix of nucleosynthesis processes responsible for the UHGCRs; determine how UHGCR elements are selected for acceleration, and measure the mean integrated pathlength traversed by UHGCRs before observation. The scientific motivation and instrument complement of HNX will be discussed.

Authors

  • John Mitchell

    NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

  • W. Robert Binns

    Washington University in St. Louis

  • Thomas Hams

    CRESST/UMBC/GSFC

  • Martin Israel

    Washington University in St. Louis

  • John Krizmanic

    CRESST/USRA/GSFC

  • Jason Link

    CRESST/USRA/GSFC

  • Brian Rauch

    Washington University in St. Louis, Department of Physics and McDonnell Center for the Space Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis

  • Kenichi Sakai

    CRESST/UMBC/GSFC

  • Makoto Sasaki

    CRESST/UMCP/GSFC

  • Andrew Westphal

    University of California Berkeley

  • Mark Wiedenbeck

    Jet Propulsion Laboratory