Cosmic-ray Boron Flux Measured from 8.4 GeV$/n$ to 3.8 TeV$/n$ with the Calorimetric Electron Telescope on the International Space Station
O. Adriani, Y. Akaike, K. Asano, Y. Asaoka, E. Berti, G. Bigongiari,, W. R. Binns, M. Bongi, P. Brogi, A. Bruno, J. H. Buckley, N. Cannady, G., Castellini, C. Checchia, M. L. Cherry, G. Collazuol, G. A. de Nolfo, K., Ebisawa, A.W. Ficklin, H. Fuke, S. Gonzi, T. G. Guzik, T. Hams

TL;DR
This paper reports precise measurements of cosmic-ray boron flux and B/C ratio from 8.4 GeV/n to 3.8 TeV/n using CALET on the ISS, revealing spectral hardening and implications for cosmic-ray propagation models.
Contribution
First measurement of boron flux up to 3.8 TeV/n with CALET, showing spectral hardening and providing new insights into cosmic-ray propagation.
Findings
Boron flux spectrum hardens at ~200 GeV/n
B/C ratio shows possible hardening, but not statistically definitive
Data compatible with a non-zero residual escape path length in cosmic-ray models
Abstract
We present the measurement of the energy dependence of the boron flux in cosmic rays and its ratio to the carbon flux \textcolor{black}{in an energy interval from 8.4 GeV to 3.8 TeV} based on the data collected by the CALorimetric Electron Telescope (CALET) during years of operation on the International Space Station. An update of the energy spectrum of carbon is also presented with an increase in statistics over our previous measurement. The observed boron flux shows a spectral hardening at the same transition energy GeV of the C spectrum, though B and C fluxes have different energy dependences. The spectral index of the B spectrum is found to be in the interval GeV. The B spectrum hardens by , while the best fit value for the spectral variation of C is $\Delta…
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