Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 April 2016
It has recently been reported (Cini-Castagnoli et al. 1973; Jacklyn and Cini-Castagnoli, 1974) that Jupiter may be responsible for a modulation component in the counting rate of underground cosmic ray detectors on the earth. The evidence suggests that a screening mechanism is operating, in as much as the observed counting rates are diminished when Jupiter is within the field of view of these detectors. The magnitude of the effect is larger than can be accounted for by simple line-of-sight obscuration by the planet itself, and it has been suggested that the intense and extensive Jovian magnetic field is producing the effect.