Why Are We Bombarded by Muons? Muons are unstable subatomic particles that decay to electrons with a
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(a) What is the greatest distance a muon could travel during its 2.2-p.s lifetime?
(b) According to your answer in part (a), it would seem that muons could never make it to the ground. But the 2.2-p.s lifetime is measured in the frame of the muon, and muons are moving very fast. At a speed of 0.999c what is the mean lifetime of a muon as measured by an observer at rest on the earth? How far would the muon travel in this time? Does this result explain why we find muons in cosmic rays? (c) From the point of view of the muon, it still lives for only 2.2p.s, so how does it make it to the ground? What is the thickness of the 10 km of atmosphere through which the muon must travel, as measured by the muon? It is now clear how the muon is able to reach the ground?
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Related Book For
Fundamentals of Physics
ISBN: 978-1118230725
10th Extended edition
Authors: Jearl Walker, Halliday Resnick
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