Analysis of the differential kinetic energy per nucleon spectra of galactic cosmic-ray He, Li, Be, B, C, N, and O with the University of Chicago cosmic-ray telescope on board the IMP-5 satellite in 1969-1970. The ratios He/(C + N + O) and (Li + Be + B)/(C + N + O) obtained from these spectra are found, within errors of about 20%, to be energy-independent over the energy range 10-1000 MeV per nucleon, and equal to about 15 and about 0.25, respectively. These results are compared with discrepancies existing among other measurements of these ratios, and with predictions of a class of steady-state models of cosmic-ray propagation which assume that Li, Be, and B are absent in cosmic-ray sources. The best fits for the present measurements are obtained for models with a source spectrum in the form of a power law in total energy per nucleon, but even these fits are outside the error limits at energies below 100 MeV per nucleon. In the context of the propagation models examined, it is concluded that the observed behavior of these ratios requires an additional mechanism operative at low energies. This mechanism may be adiabatic deceleration of cosmic rays in the solar wind. In order for this mechanism to be adiabatic deceleration, the deceleration in 1969 must have been such that particles observed at 10 to 20 MeV per nucleon had energies greater than 100 to 150 MeV per nucleon in the local interstellar space.
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