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CREAM Selected for ISS

View of the CREAM instrument prior to launch aboard a long-duration balloon.
CREAM, a balloon-borne cosmic ray instrument, during testing in the Antarctic.

Research that started aboard balloons a century ago will soon culminate in a three-year stint aboard the International Space Station as scientists work on solving a fundamental astrophysics mystery: what gives cosmic rays such incredible energies, and how does that affect the composition of the universe?

Cosmic Ray Energetics and Mass (CREAM) will be the first cosmic ray instrument designed to detect at such higher energy ranges, and over such an extended duration in space. Scientists hope to discover whether cosmic rays are accelerated by a single cause, which is believed to be supernovae. The new research also could determine why there are fewer cosmic rays detected at very high energies than are theorized to exist.

This photo shows the CREAM instrument prior to launch aboard a long-duration balloon in Antarctica. Credits: NASA

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