Abstract
Measurements are reported of the relative abundances of Mn, Fe, Co, and Ni isotopes in Galactic cosmic rays with energies of about 325 MeV per nucleon. The observed limit (Mn-54)/(Mn-53) of less than 0.25 is significantly less than the value of about 0.8-0.9 expected if Mn-54 were stable, indicating that most of the Mn-54 produced during cosmic-ray propagation in the Galaxy has undergone radioactive decay. Relative source abundances of iron and nickel isotopes, and in particular the ratio (Fe-54)/(Fe-56) = 0.046 +/- 0.020, are generally consistent with solar system values. One exception is the source ratio (Ni-60)/(Ni-58) for which an enhancement by a factor of 2.8 +/- 1.0 over the solar value is found. The isotope (Co-59) is found to make up a sizable fraction of the observed Co, indicating a time delay more than about 100,000 yr between nucleosynthesis and acceleration if this nuclide is synthesized as (Cu-59) or (Ni-59).
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