An
air shower is an extensive (many kilometres wide)
cascade of ionized particles and
electromagnetic radiation produced in the
atmosphere when a
primary cosmic ray (i.e. one of extraterrestrial origin) enters the atmosphere. The term
cascade means that the incident particle, which could be a
proton, a
nucleus, an
electron, a
photon, or (rarely) a
positron, strikes an atom's nucleus in the air so as to produce many energetic
hadrons. The unstable hadrons decay in the air speedily into other particles and electromagnetic radiation, which are part of the shower components. The secondary radiation rains down, including
x-rays,
muons,
protons,
antiprotons,
alpha particles,
pions,
electrons,
positrons, and
neutrons.