@article{f8538a07db3f48549c7a06a95f92f4a7,
title = "Extended Measurement of the Cosmic-Ray Electron and Positron Spectrum from 11 GeV to 4.8 TeV with the Calorimetric Electron Telescope on the International Space Station",
abstract = "Extended results on the cosmic-ray electron + positron spectrum from 11 GeV to 4.8 TeV are presented based on observations with the Calorimetric Electron Telescope (CALET) on the International Space Station utilizing the data up to November 2017. The analysis uses the full detector acceptance at high energies, approximately doubling the statistics compared to the previous result. CALET is an all-calorimetric instrument with a total thickness of 30 X0 at normal incidence and fine imaging capability, designed to achieve large proton rejection and excellent energy resolution well into the TeV energy region. The observed energy spectrum in the region below 1 TeV shows good agreement with Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS-02) data. In the energy region below ∼300 GeV, CALET's spectral index is found to be consistent with the AMS-02, Fermi Large Area Telescope (Fermi-LAT), and Dark Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE), while from 300 to 600 GeV the spectrum is significantly softer than the spectra from the latter two experiments. The absolute flux of CALET is consistent with other experiments at around a few tens of GeV. However, it is lower than those of DAMPE and Fermi-LAT with the difference increasing up to several hundred GeV. The observed energy spectrum above ∼1 TeV suggests a flux suppression consistent within the errors with the results of DAMPE, while CALET does not observe any significant evidence for a narrow spectral feature in the energy region around 1.4 TeV. Our measured all-electron flux, including statistical errors and a detailed breakdown of the systematic errors, is tabulated in the Supplemental Material in order to allow more refined spectral analyses based on our data.",
author = "{(CALET Collaboration)} and O. Adriani and Y. Akaike and K. Asano and Y. Asaoka and Bagliesi, {M. G.} and E. Berti and G. Bigongiari and Binns, {W. R.} and S. Bonechi and M. Bongi and P. Brogi and Buckley, {J. H.} and N. Cannady and G. Castellini and C. Checchia and Cherry, {M. L.} and G. Collazuol and {Di Felice}, V. and K. Ebisawa and H. Fuke and Guzik, {T. G.} and T. Hams and M. Hareyama and N. Hasebe and K. Hibino and M. Ichimura and K. Ioka and W. Ishizaki and Israel, {M. H.} and K. Kasahara and J. Kataoka and R. Kataoka and Y. Katayose and C. Kato and N. Kawanaka and Y. Kawakubo and K. Kohri and Krawczynski, {H. S.} and Krizmanic, {J. F.} and T. Lomtadze and P. Maestro and Marrocchesi, {P. S.} and Messineo, {A. M.} and Mitchell, {J. W.} and S. Miyake and Moiseev, {A. A.} and K. Mori and M. Mori and N. Mori and K. Yoshida",
note = "Funding Information: We gratefully acknowledge JAXA{\textquoteright}s contributions to the development of CALET and to the operations onboard the International Space Station. We also wish to express our sincere gratitude to ASI and NASA for their support of the CALET project. This work was supported in part by a JSPS Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (S) (No. 26220708) and by the MEXT-Supported Program for the Strategic Research Foundation at Private Universities (No. S1101021) at Waseda University. The CALET effort in the United States is supported by NASA through Grants No. NNX16AB99G, No. NNX16AC02G, and No. NNH14ZDA001N-APRA-0075. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2018 American Physical Society.",
year = "2018",
month = jun,
day = "25",
doi = "10.1103/PhysRevLett.120.261102",
language = "English",
volume = "120",
journal = "Physical Review Letters",
issn = "0031-9007",
publisher = "American Physical Society",
number = "26",
}