High Energy Light Isotope eXperiment

HELIX is a balloon-borne experiment designed to measure the chemical and isotopic abundances of light cosmic ray nuclei. Measurements by HELIX, especially of 10Be from 0.2 GeV/n to beyond 3 GeV/n, will provide an essential set of data for the study of propagation processes of the cosmic rays. HELIX consists of a 1 Tesla superconducting magnet with a high-resolution drift-chamber tracker, time of flight detector, and a ring-imaging Cherenkov detector. The instrument is planned to have a long-duration balloon flight during an upcoming northern or southern hemisphere balloon campaign.

Measurements of this kind at lower energies have in the past provided profound insights into the nature and origin of cosmic rays, revealing, for instance, information about acceleration and confinement timescales, and exposing some conspicuous discrepancies between solar and cosmic-ray abundances.

Science Overview

The HELIX experiment seeks to make measurements of the composition of light cosmic rays in the energy range from below 1 GeV/n to 10 GeV/n, with a specific emphasis on the determination of astrophysically important isotopic abundance ratios.

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Instrument

The HELIX instrument is a magnet spectrometer system consisting of a 1 T superconducting magnet, a drift chamber tracker, and an aerogel RICH. Scintillator paddles above and below the magnet bore and below the RICH form a high-performance time-of-flight system, provide the instrument trigger, and measure the particle charge.

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Campaigns

HELIX is moving forward to be ready for integration in 2023.

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Publications

See our latest results

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Collaboration

Who we are

University

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Sponsors

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