The Atmosphere

Luckily for us living on Earth, when a cosmic ray particle arrives at the Earth the first thing they will encounter is the Earth’s atmosphere.

The Atmosphere

Before studying the interactions of cosmic rays in the atmosphere we need some tools and a model that will describe more or less our atmosphere. To study the cosmic rays interactions in the atmosphere it is useful to define a parameter that we will call the vertical atmospheric depth (sometimes also called column density) defined as the integral in altitude of the atmospheric density ρ\rho above the observation level or altitude hh:

Xv(h)=hρ(h)dhX_v(h) = \int_h^{\infty} \rho(h^\prime) \textrm{d}h^\prime

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Note that XvX_v is measured in g/cm2\rm{g/cm}^2 and to calculate it we need to know how the density changes as a function of the altitude hh

The vertical atmospheric depth goes in the opposite direction of the altitude. Ie, it is 0 at the top layers of the atmosphere (when hh\rightarrow \infty) and it is maximum at sea level, when h=0h = 0.

Schematics of the vertical atmospheric depth.

The Isothermal Model

In a hydrostatic atmosphere a particular layer of gas located at some altitude is static, meaning that the sum of its forces will add to 0. So let's imagine an element of atmosphere of width dh{\rm d}h and area AA as illustrated in the image below.

Sum of forces over an element of atmosphere

If the element remains static that means that the downward (towards the planet) force of its weight, plus the downward force exerted by pressure of the layer above it, and the upward force exerted by pressure from the layer below, they all sum to zero. We can write this equilibrium of forces as:

PA(P+ dP)A(ρA dh)g0=0P\cdot A - (P + \textrm{ d}P)\cdot A - (\rho A \textrm{ d}h)g_0 =0

Using the ideal gas law that we all know P=ρRTMP = \frac{\rho RT}{M}with RR is the ideal gas constant, TT is temperature, MM is average molecular weight, and g0g_0 is the gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface. Using this we get from the equation above

dPP=g0MRTdh\frac{{\textrm d}P}{P} = -\frac{g_0 M}{R T} {\textrm d} h

Now let's imagine that our atmosphere is isothermal which means T=cteT = {\rm cte}, we know that this is not true, but is surprisingly a good approximation for our atmosphere. If we integrate we obtain that pressure decreases exponentially with increasing height as:

P=P0eg0MRThP = P_0 e^{-\frac{g_0 M}{R T} h}

where we can define the scale height h0h_0 as:

h0=RTMg0h_0 = \frac{R T}{M g_0}

Since the temperature is assumed to be constant it follows that ρ\rho also changes exponentially as ρ=ρ0eh/h0\rho = \rho_0 {\textrm e}^{-h/h_0} and therefore the column density can be written as:

Xv=Xv0eh/h0X_v = X_v^0 {\textrm e}^{-h/h_0}

where Xv0X_v^0 is 1030 g/cm2\textrm{g/cm}^2 is the atmospheric depth at sea level, h=0h=0. In particular for the isothermal model we have that the relation between atmospheric depth (aka column density) and density is:

ρ(Xv)=Xvh0\rho(X_v) = \frac{X_v}{h_0}
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Using typical values (T=273  KT = 273 \textrm{\;K} and M=29  g/molM = 29 \textrm{\;g/mol}) we get that h08  kmh_0 \sim 8 \textrm{\;km}which just happens to be approximate height of Mt. Everest

In reality the temperature changes and hence the scale height decreases with increasing altitude until the tropopause.

This equations are valid for vertical particles, for zenith angles <60< 60^\circ (for which we can ignore the Earth's curvature) the formula is scaled with 1/cosθ1/\cos{\theta} giving the slant depth

X=XvcosθX = \frac{X_v}{\cos \theta}

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