Cosmogenic 3He and 21Ne measured in quartz targets after one year of exposure in the Swiss Alps
Pieter
Vermeesch1
2,
Heinrich Baur1, Veronika S. Heber1
3
Keywords: cosmogenic nuclides, attenuation length, neon, helium, quartz 1 IntroductionAll currently used scaling models for Terrestrial Cosmogenic Nuclide (TCN) production rates are based on neutron
monitor surveys (Lal, 1991; Stone, 2000; Dunai, 2000, 2001; Desilets and Zreda, 2003; Pigati and
Lifton, 2004; Lifton et al., 2008). Therefore, an assumption underlying all cosmogenic nuclide studies is that
production rates are directly proportional to secondary cosmic ray intensities for all cosmogenic nuclides. Several
efforts are underway to test this crucial assumption by TCN production rate calibrations in the framework of the
CRONUS-EU and CRONUS-Earth initiatives. The bulk of this work is done on landforms of known age (Desilets
and Zreda, 2006). These so-called ‘natural calibration targets’ are the method of choice for the calculation of
accurate TCN production rates integrated over millennial time scales but are, unfortunately, often affected by
poorly constrainted factors such as shielding and erosion. It is notoriously hard to find vertical transects of
natural calibration sites that allow the calculation of production rate attenuation lengths. Herein lies the
complementary strength of artificial calibration targets. Because the exposure conditions of the latter are either
known or constant, all systematic errors cancel out in the calculation of a production rate attenuation
length. We here present the first results of an artificial target experiment measuring, for the first time,
cosmogenic 3He and 21Ne in quartz after one year of exposure at mountain altitudes in the Swiss Alps.
Previous artificial target experiments have mainly focused on water (Lal et al., 1960; Nishiizumi
et al., 1996; Graham et al., 2000; Brown et al., 2000), although one pilot experiment used a silicate glass (Graf
et al., 1996). We used quartz as the target material, because it is the most commonly used mineral
for exposure dating and both cosmogenic helium and neon are produced and retained in the target
container.
Our project has a history of more than ten years. A first target design was developed back in 1997. These were
stainless steel containers with 14 cm radius and 45 cm height, filled with 4 kg of industrial quartz sand of natural
origin (Fluka, no. 83340 (Schaefer, 2000; Kober, 2004)). The targets were heated to >800 ∘C under vacuum for a
week in order to ensure complete degassing prior to exposure, and double sealed with a valve and copper
tube clamp to prevent atmospheric leaks during exposure. Fourteen of these targets were exposed
at seven different locations for two to four years. Two of them were measured, one unexposed blank
target and one target that had been exposed at Jungfraujoch, at an altitude of 3571 m. The pilot
experiment was aborted after the neon and helium compositions of these two targets were found to
be a mixture of cosmogenic and other components (Kober, 2004). There are two reasons why the
first target design failed. The presence of a ‘trapped’ component (neon plotting above the mixing line
between atmospheric and cosmogenic components, the so-called ‘spallation line’; Niedermann, 2002)
indicates that pre-exposure degassing was insufficient, and that the quartz did not reach the 600 ∘C
degassing temperature of neon (Niedermann, 2002). The presence of a ‘nucleogenic’ component (neon
plotting below the spallation line) indicates that despite the purity of the industrial quartz sand, it still
contained sufficient alpha producing U and Th (120 and 172 ppb, respectively) to compromise the helium
and neon measurements. These observations led to the development of a second generation target
design.
The effectiveness of the revised target design was verified in a custom-built prototype container (Section 2.1). Ten of these targets were exposed at different elevations in the Swiss Alps, at altitudes ranging from 556 to 4554m (Section 2.2). Cosmogenic 3He and 21Ne were measured after one year of exposure, using a custom-built mass spectrometer and an optimised measurement routine (Section 2.3). Data reduction included corrections for non-atmospheric blanks, shielding, solar modulation, and tritiogenic helium (Section 3). 3He and 21Ne were measured in two steps at room temperature and at 700 ∘C. Most of the 3He and all of the 21Ne were measured in the hot step (Section 4). The altitude dependency of the TCN production rates was quantified by plotting them against atmospheric depth, yielding attenuation lengths that are in perfect agreement with existing scaling models (Section 5). Production rates were scaled to sea level and high latitude and agree well with previous determinations on natural calibration sites (Section 6). We conclude this paper with an outlook to the future, when duplicate artificial targets will be used to determine the 3He/3H branching ratio and we will monitor cosmogenic noble gas production rates over an entire solar cycle (Section 7).
2 Methods
2.1 Target design The first generation targets suffered from sub-optimal degassing and impure quartz (Section 1). Both of
these problems were addressed in the second generation target design. To eliminate the trapped neon
component and ensure optimal degassing, the radius of the seemless stainless steel (grade 1.4301) canisters
was reduced from 14 to 6 cm (Figure 1.c), and in order to eliminate the nucleogenic component, we
used artificially grown quartz crystals of optimal purity (supplied by Morion Company, USA), which
were crushed to 250-500 μm sand size (Figure 1.a), and rinsed with water and acetone. Gamma ray
spectrometry measurements revealed U and Th concentrations <16 and <49 ppb, respectively, which is
below the detection limit of the method and also below the levels measured in the Fluka quartz sand
(Strasky, 2008). To verify the effectiveness of the new target design, two thermocouples were installed
in a prototype container filled with 800 g quartz sand (Figure 1.c). After a heating period of ~2.5
hours at an external temperature of 900 ∘C, the temperature reached by the quartz in the innermost
part of the container was ~850 ∘C, well above the degassing temperatures of helium and neon (< 600
∘C, Niedermann, 2002) (Figure 1.d). To reduce the blank, the external temperature for the actual
target measurements was later reduced to 700 ∘C, which should yield ~650 ∘C quartz temperatures.
As was the case for the first generation (Section 1), also the second generation targets were double
sealed by a ‘bellows-sealed’ Swagelok 2.2 Pre-treatment and installationOne kg of the artificial quartz sand was degassed inside the targets for one week at 700 ∘C in vacuum prior to exposure using a custom-built furnace (Figure 1.b). The targets were rolled in bubble wrap and placed in fibreglass cable trays for protection against the weather, and were installed in a horizontal position to minimise self-shielding. In August of 2006, two targets were exposed at each of five locations: Zürich (556m), Davos (1560m), Säntis (2502m), Jungfraujoch (3571m), and Monte Rosa (4554m). All of these locations (except for Monte Rosa) are meteorological observatories of the Swiss Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology (MeteoSwiss), which were kept snow-free during the winter of 2006-2007. The Zürich, Davos, and Säntis targets were installed outside and secured to the railings of meteorological equipment. Because of the extremely high wind speeds at the Jungfraujoch and Monte Rosa sites, those targets were kept inside. Additionally, a sixth set of two blank targets was stored in the basement of a 10-storey building housing the ETH noble gas laboratory, ~15m below street level, and effectively shielded from cosmic ray exposure. Exactly one year later, the targets were retrieved and subsequently measured.
2.3 MeasurementsEven in one kilogram of quartz and at mountain altitudes, the expected amounts of cosmogenic gas are extremely
low, on the order of tens of thousands of atoms in a volume of more than four litres. To measure such
minute amounts of noble gases, we used a unique kind of mass spectrometer developed at ETH-Zürich,
which is equipped with a compressor source (Baur, 1999). The compressor consists of a magnetically
levitated rotor, spinning at 1500 Hz, which forces the gas along spiral grooves in the inner wall of the
stator. The neutral gas then enters the ionization volume and gets accelerated towards the magnet
and ion detectors. The compressor source acts as a pump, consuming a much larger portion of the
sample gas than a conventional mass spectrometer, and resulting in a two orders of magnitude gain in
sensitivity.
Cosmogenic noble gases were measured in two steps at room temperature and 700 ∘C. Before commencing the
measurements, the connection of the artificial targets to the gas preparation line via the copper tube and a flexible
bellow was baked and degassed for 24 hours. Pressure in the extraction line and mass spectrometer was maintained
at ultrahigh vacuum conditions of ~ 10-10 mbar. To protect the extraction line and mass spectrometer against
potential atmospheric leaks, a ‘dummy run’ was made by measuring the gas between the stainless steel
pinch-off and the valve. Because the amount of this gas was always very small (~ 20,000 atoms 3He)
and had an atmospheric composition (3He/4He ≈ 2.1 ± 0.9 × 10-6), it is not reported in the data
tables. Next, the valve was opened and the target volume equilibrated with a cold finger filled with
activated charcoal and cooled by liquid N2 for 15 minutes before releasing the gas into the gas purification
line, where it was cleaned by one Ag and three Zr/Ti getters and two additional cold fingers for 30
minutes. Neon and helium were measured separately by freezing the neon to a cryogenic trap at 12.7
K for 15 minutes. The gas was expanded into the mass spectrometer while exposed to a final cold
finger and getter. To monitor the sensitivity of the mass spectrometer (which changed < 2 %/day),
calibrations (‘fast cals’) were done every morning and evening, using a fixed gas amount of an internal lab
standard.
The sample gas was pumped into the ionization volume by the aforementioned magnetically levitated
compressor, ionized by a Baur-Signer source (Baur, 1980) and accelerated through a magnetic sector
mass-spectometer with a trajectory radius of 210 mm and mass resolution set to 600 in order to resolve 3He from
the HD molecule. The 3He signal was digitally measured on an ion counter in 20 steps of 60 seconds
while 4He was measured in analogue mode on a Faraday cup in 20 steps of 40 seconds. These long
measurement times were necessary to overcome the relatively poor counting statistics associated with our
extremely low signals. Extrapolation to the time of gas inlet was achieved by linear regression of the
data. Next, the remaining helium was pumped away and the cryogenic trap heated to 50K in order to
release the neon. Whereas the helium isotopes were simultaneously analysed, 20Ne, 22Ne and 21Ne were
measured in peak jumping mode on the ion counter in 15 cycles of 20, 30 and 60 seconds, respectively.
H2O, 40Ar and CO2 were monitored and interference corrections were made for masses 20 (2o of H2O
and 0.45 o of 40Ar) and 22 (0.044 o of CO2). 20Ne was extrapolated to the time of gas inlet by
exponential regression. The 21Ne and 22Ne abundances were calculated by monitoring the 22Ne/20Ne and
21Ne/20Ne ratios over the course of each analysis. These so-called ‘local ratios’ were constant for the
first five target measurements, which took place in November 2007. The remaining four targets were
measured several months later as a result of technical problems unrelated to our experiment. The mass
spectrometer behaved slightly differently when the measurements resumed, resulting in 22Ne/20Ne
and 21Ne/20Ne local ratios that increased with time. To account for this change in behaviour, a new
blank target (T16) was measured after completion of the final measurements, so as to ensure internal
consistency of the target measurements and the blank-target based fractionation correction (Section
3.1).
After completion of the neon measurement, the cryogenic trap and mass spectrometer were isolated from the extraction line, the remaining ‘cold’ target gas was pumped away, and the furnace was switched on. An external temperature of 700 ∘C (corresponding to an internal temperature of ~650 ∘C, Figure 1.d) was maintained for five hours, after which the ‘hot’ measurement proceeded in exactly the same way as the ‘cold’ measurement described in the previous paragraph. In addition to the sensitivity calibrations, we also performed a set of abundance calibrations (‘slow cals’) by expanding a known volume of calibration gas into the extraction line, including the target volume. This was done at both room temperature and 700 ∘C, using exactly the same analytical procedure as for a real target measurement.
3 Data reductionThe raw measurements were in units of Ampères (4He) and Hertz (all other nuclides). They were converted to atomic units by sensitivity and abundance calibrations (the aforementioned ‘fast cals’ and ‘slow cals’, respectively). The resulting values were corrected for non-atmospheric blanks, shielding, solar modulation and tritiogenic helium, following procedures described in the following paragraphs.
3.1 Blank correctionsPressure inside the targets was 1-2 × 10-2 mbar after one year of exposure. While this low pressure showcases the effectiveness of the pre-exposure degassing and the double seal, the inferred amounts of non-cosmogenic 3He in the blank are far from trivial and must be corrected for. The easiest solution is to assume an atmospheric isotopic composition (column 9 of Table 1). However, the 3He/4He-ratio for the cold step of blank target T13 was 17.7 ± 1.9 ×10-6, significantly higher than the atmospheric value (1.399 ± 0.013 ×10-6, Porcelli et al. (2002)). The hot steps were closer to atmosphere: 3.3 ± 1.1 ×10-6 for T13, and 4.3 ± 1.5 ×10-6 for a second blank target, T16 (column 7 of Table 1). The non-atmospheric helium compositions imply a fractionated blank, possibly due to diffusion of helium and/or tritium (Tilles, 1962) through the valves and container wall. We used the measured isotopic ratios of the blank targets for the blank correction of all our targets (column 11 of Table 1), and applied the same procedure for the neon measurements (column 15 of Table 2). The blank corrections have a strong effect on the low temperature helium measurements of the low-altitude targets (Zürich, Davos, Säntis); a moderate effect on the high-altitude targets (Jungfraujoch, Monte Rosa); and a minor effect on the high temperature measurements, including neon. Fortunately, most of the helium and all of the neon were released at high temperature (Section 4).
3.2 ShieldingNo topographic shielding correction was required because all the high elevation targets were installed on the summits of mountains, and the low elevation targets (Zürich and Davos) were located in broad valleys. Snow cover was either removed or negligible. A 1.5 % correction was associated with shielding by the container wall (2.6 mm steel) and an additional 1.5 % with the roofs at the Monte Rosa and Jungfraujoch sites (2 mm aluminium plus 2 cm wood). A nominal uncertainty of 50% was assigned to these corrections.
3.3 Solar modulation
The experiment took place during a solar minimum, causing higher than normal production rates. One of our targets was installed adjacent to the IGY neutron monitor at the Jungfraujoch neutron observatory, which has been in continuous operation since 1958. We have scaled our results to the average neutron signal over the past four solar cycles. This correction lowered our longer term production rate estimates by 4.6% (Figure 2). 3.4 Tritiogenic heliumThe cosmogenic 3He measured in natural samples is either directly derived from spallogenic reactions on heavier nuclides, or it is a secondary radiogenic product of spallogenic tritium. The half life of 3H is 12.32 years, which is short compared to the time periods of interest in exposure dating, but long in comparison with the duration of our artificial target experiment. Therefore, the apparent 3He production rates measured by our artificial targets are significantly lower than the effective 3He production rate relevant to TCN studies. The relative amount of 3He measured at a time t after the retrieval of a target that has been exposed for a time period T is given by: ![]()
where B is the 3He/3H-branching ratio, which is unknown for spallation by neutrons, but has been estimated by
simulation and proton-based accelerator experiments to be ~0.9 for Si and ~1.06 for O (Leya and Masarik, 2009).
Therefore, we will assume B = 1 for quartz in the following.
In the case of water targets, it is straightforward to measure the branching ratio. Because tritium binds to oxygen in water, it is retained in the target during 3He measurement. By remeasuring a target some time after release of the ‘primary’ 3He, the amount of tritiogenic helium can be determined, and a branching ratio calculated (Brown et al., 2000). Things are somewhat more complicated for quartz targets, because some if not all of the tritium may escape during the heating step. Therefore, a second target is needed to estimate the 3He/3H-branching ratio in quartz. Thus, our duplicate targets serve a dual purpose. In addition to allowing a backup solution for failed measurements, they also provide the only way to avoid making assumptions about the branching ratio. We intend to analyse those duplicate targets that have not yet been measured, especially the high altitude targets from Monte Rosa and Jungfraujoch, five to ten years from now. In the meanwhile, it is still necessary to assume a branching ratio for the tritium-correction.
4 ResultsTargets T13, T10, T12, T8 and T9 were measured in November 2007. Target T8 (Säntis) suffered from an
atmospheric leak, causing anomalously high – but still measurable – pressures and raw signals significantly
higher than those of the Monte Rosa target (Table 1). The leak precluded the 21Ne measurement for
T8, but after the blank correction, the 3He signal was still meaningful albeit imprecise. In December
2007, following an accident unrelated to our experiment, the extraction line was contaminated with
water, and the mass spectrometer was out of service for half a year. When the duplicate Säntis target
(T7) was measured in July of 2008, sensitivity of the machine had dropped by a third. Sensitivity
increased again by about 10% in September of 2008, but this was associated with a marked increase in
the residual blank, which compromised the lowest elevation measurement (T15 – Zürich). After a
thorough servicing of the extraction line and mass spectrometer, blanks were finally reduced and the
sensitivity restored to the original levels. A duplicate Zürich measurement (T2) was made as well
as an additional blank target (T16). The measurements of the ‘failed’ target measurements (T8 and
T15) are given in Table 1 for the sake of completeness, but will not be considered in the remainder
of this paper, which will use the duplicate target measurements (T7 and T2) instead. Therefore, in
the following paragraphs, ‘Säntis’ is equivalent to ‘target T7’, and ‘Zürich’ is equivalent to ‘target
T2’.
The helium release spectra indicate that between 1 and 9% of the cosmogenic 3He was measured in the cold step
(Table 1). This confirms earlier experiments indicating that 3He quickly diffuses out of quartz at room temperature
(Shuster and Farley, 2005). The remaining 3He was released at 700 ∘C. The 3He/4He isotopic ratio systematically
increases with elevation, which is a clear sign of cosmogenic helium production. Non-atmospheric blank corrections
were 5% for the Monte Rosa target, 10% for Jungfraujoch, 30% for Säntis and Davos, and 50% for Zürich
(Table 1). During the delay caused by the aforementioned technical problems, spallogenic 3H in the
targets decayed by about 5%, resulting in an equivalent change in the tritiogenic helium correction
for the targets measured in 2008 (T7 and later), compared to the targets measured in 2007 (T8 and
earlier).
Virtually no 21Ne was measured in the cold step, with nearly all the cosmogenic 21Ne being released at 700 ∘C.
Re-extraction measurement at 800 ∘C for the Monte Rosa target showed that the small amount of gas that
remained at that temperature had an atmospheric composition (Table 2). On the neon three-isotope
plot, all targets are within 2σ from the spallation line (Figure 3). The cold neon steps (not shown)
and blank targets (T13 and T16) have an atmospheric composition. Precision of the Zürich target
(T2) was insufficient to distinguish it from atmosphere, reflecting the limits of our target design. Both
in the blanks and in the 800∘C re-extraction, the neon composition is slightly fractionated. This is
consistent with the (much stronger) fractionation observed for helium. Blank corrections for neon were less
than 5% except for the Davos target (8%). This is much smaller than the helium blank corrections.
Furthermore, blank corrections are inherently ‘safer’ for neon than helium because the former has three
isotopes, facilitating the detection of non-atmospheric components (Figure 3). So whereas neon is more
challenging to measure than helium due to the lower production rates and higher degassing temperature,
the data reduction is easier because blanks are less of an issue, and there is no significant radiogenic
source.
Although an empty target container (exposed in Tibet since 2005) was not retrieved for logistical reasons, it is possible to evaluate the production of cosmogenic noble gases from the container walls by considering the 3He/21Ne production rate ratio. We may safely assume that 3He would be affected more than 21Ne, first because steel/quartz production rate ratios are considerably higher for 3He than for 21Ne and second because helium should diffuse more efficiently from the walls into the container than neon. Hence, the 3He/21Ne-ratio in the empty targets should be higher than the quartz value. The weighted mean of our measured 3He/21Ne ratios is 7.0 ± 0.9 (2σ) whereas in natural quartz it may be about 6.7 (Masarik and Reedy, 1995). Thus, we believe that although some of the measured 3He and 21Ne may come from the container, this fraction is small. At any rate, it is unimportant for the calculation of a production rate attenuation length, which is discussed next. 5 Attenuation lengths
The main goal of the artificial target experiment was to determine the production rate attenuation length. Because all our targets had an identical design and were exposed under identical conditions, all systematic errors should cancel out in the calculation of an attenuation length. After scaling the measurements to a common reference latitude (Davos) using the latitudinal scaling model of Desilets et al. (2006), our best estimates are 134.6 ± 5.9 g/cm2 for the 3He attenuation length and 135 ± 25 g/cm2 for the 21Ne attenuation length (Figure 4). The MSWDs of 1.9 and 0.32 indicate slight over- and underdispersion for 3He and 21Ne, respectively (McIntyre et al., 1966). Overall, the fit is very good and the precision of the attenuation lengths (4% for 3He) is comparable to or better than that obtained by natural calibration experiments (e.g., Desilets and Zreda, 2006). In order to compare our attenuation length estimates with existing scaling models, the reference cutoff rigidity of 4.36 GV was converted to an equivalent dipolar geomagnetic latitude of 43.47∘ and geomagnetic inclination of 62.19∘. Using these latitudinal parameters, scaling factors were calculated for the atmospheric depths of our target locations according to various scaling procedures, and for each scaling procedure a single exponential curve was fitted to the synthetic data, exactly as was done for the actual target measurements. The resulting attenuation lengths compare favourably with our estimates, ranging from 146 g/cm2 (Lal, 1991; Stone, 2000) to 131 g/cm2 (Dunai, 2000; Desilets and Zreda, 2003) and 133 g/cm2 (Desilets et al., 2006). All calculations were done using CosmoCalc 1.4 (Vermeesch, 2007). 6 Production rates
Determining cosmogenic noble gas production rates from artificial quartz targets is challenging
because of the substantial uncertainties associated with the various corrections (Section 3). This is
especially the case for the 3He/3H branching ratio which, as explained before, we have assumed to be one
(Section 3.4). Given these caveats, the production rate estimates are remarkably consistent with previous
determinations.
The corrected measurements were scaled to sea level and high latitude (SLHL) using the empirical 3He
attenuation length of 134.6 ± 5.9 g/cm2 and cutoff rigidity values provided by the University of Bern
(http://cosray.unibe.ch). The five 3He production rate estimates scatter between 102 and 128at/g/yr, with
analytical uncertainties between 11% (Säntis) and 21% (Zürich)(Figure 5). The weighted mean production rate of
107.6 ± 6.6 at/g/yr is in good agreement with physics-based model calculations (Masarik and Reedy, 1995). The
observed scatter is well explained by the analytical uncertainty alone, as indicated by the MSWD of
0.75.
The 21Ne production rate estimates range from 15 to 19 at/g/yr, with analytical uncertainties of 22 to 80%, which is substantially larger than the helium production rate uncertainties. The relatively low MSWD (0.20) indicates underdispersion and, therefore, the neon uncertainties are probably somewhat overestimated. The weighted mean of the five production rate estimates is 15.4 ± 2.1 at/g/yr, which is also close to the accepted values (Niedermann et al., 1994; Masarik and Reedy, 1995; Niedermann, 2000; Goethals et al., 2009; Amidon et al., 2009), especially considering that solar activity has been consideraby higher over the past five decades than during the 11,000 years before that (Solanki et al., 2004), causing lower than normal instantaneous TCN production rates. 7 Conclusions and outlookWe successfully measured cosmogenic 3He and 21Ne in quartz after one year of exposure in the Swiss Alps. After
correcting for non-atmospheric blanks, shielding, tritiogenic helium production and solar modulation, the
cosmogenic noble gas production rates agree well with previous determinations. Production rates, however, were not
our primary concern for two reasons. First, it is hard to rule out all systematic errors associated with the
aforementioned corrections. Second, production rates vary greatly over time in reponse to changes in Earth’s
magnetic field and variations in solar activity, making it difficult to compare short- and long-term production rates
with each other. Nevertheless, the good agreement of our production rate estimates with previous
determinations, and particularly the 3He/21Ne production rate ratio, gives us great confidence in the
robustness of our method. The main strength of artificial target experiments is in measuring attenuation
lengths, again for two reasons. First, all systematic errors cancel out in the calculation of an attenuation
length. Second, our short-term attenuation length estimates can be directly compared with short-term
neutron monitor surveys. The excellent agreement between the former and the latter indicates that
neutron monitors are indeed a good basis for production rate scaling models. And in contrast to what
others have suggested (Amidon et al. , 2008), altitudinal scaling of noble gases also appears to be
identical to that of other cosmogenic nuclides, such as 36Cl or 10Be. These simplifying results are a nice
departure from many other recent developments in cosmogenic nuclide science, which has rapidly grown
increasingly complex over the past few years (e.g., Pigati and Lifton, 2004; Staiger et al., 2007; Lifton
et al., 2008).
This is an ongoing experiment. As discussed before, the duplicate targets of Monte Rosa, Jungfraujoch,
and Davos have not yet been measured and are kept shielded from cosmic rays. Measuring the 3He
content of these targets in a few years time will provide a direct estimate of the 3He/3H branching
ratio in quartz. As an added bonus, because the temperature in the storage room is constant, the
amount of 3He measured in the cold step relative to that measured in the hot step will put further
constraints on the ease of diffusion of cosmogenic helium out of quartz at room temperature (Shuster and
Farley, 2005). During the summer of 2007, the targets reported in this paper were replaced by a new
set of identical targets. These replacement targets have two purposes. First, they will be exposed for
longer than one year, which will further improve the precision of our experiment. Second, subsequent
replacements will track an entire solar cycle by sequential artificial target measurements over the next
decade.
The precision of our attenuation length measurements rivals that of natural calibration samples, and the accuracy is likely to be better, as our artificial targets circumvent the geological problems (erosion, snow, and vegetation cover) affecting natural targets. Furthermore, our artificial targets can be used anywhere on the planet, whereas suitable lithologies and exposure histories for natural calibration experiments are rare. Nevertheless, natural calibration sites are still useful as they integrate cosmogenic nuclide production over millennial time scales that are more relevant to exposure dating than the one year time scale of our experiment. Thus, natural and artificial targets have complementary strengths which, together, can be used to further test and improve scaling models.
AcknowledgmentsSwift yet detailed reviews by William Amidon (Caltech) and Samuel Niedermann (GFZ Potsdam) are gratefully acknowledged. PV would also like to thank Rolf Bütikofer (University of Bern) for providing the neutron monitor measurements (Figure 2), Louise Wilson (University of Bern) for the permits to access the Jungfraujoch neutron observatory, Arthur Kunz (MeteoSwiss) for granting access to meteorological stations at all target locations below Monte Rosa, and Giorgio Tiraboschi (Club Alpino Italiano) for granting access to the Cabana Margarita on Monte Rosa. This work was financially supported by Swiss Nationalfonds grant No. 200020-105220/1 and a Marie Curie Fellowship of the European Union (CRONUS-EU network, RTN project reference 511927).
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