9,146 research outputs found
Source position reconstruction and constraints on the galactic magnetic field from ultra-high energy cosmic rays
We study the possibility to reconstruct the position of ultra-high energy
cosmic ray sources and some properties of the magnetic field along the line of
sight towards them in the case that several events from the same source are
detected. By considering an illustrative model for the galactic magnetic field,
including both a regular and a turbulent component, we estimate the accuracy
that can be achieved in the reconstruction. We analyse the effect of the
experimental energy and angular resolutions on these results. We show that if
about ten events with energies above 30 EeV are detected coming from the same
source, it should be possible to reconstruct the source position with an
accuracy of 0.5 and the integral of the orthogonal component of the
magnetic field along the line of sight with an accuracy of 0.6 G kpc
Z (with Z the electric charge of the particles).Comment: Added references and referee comments, accepted for publicatio
The flux suppression at the highest energies
Almost half a century ago, Greisen, Zatsepin and Kuz'min (GZK) predicted a
"cosmologically meaningful termination" of the spectrum of cosmic rays at
energies around eV due to their interaction with the cosmic microwave
background, as they propagate from distant extragalactic sources. A suppression
of the flux above eV is now confirmed. We argue that current
data are insufficient to conclude whether the observed feature is due to energy
loss during propagation, or else to the fact that the astrophysical
accelerators reach their limit, or indeed to a combination of both source
properties and propagation effects. We discuss the dependence of the spectral
steepening upon the cosmic-ray composition, source properties, and intervening
magnetic fields, and speculate on the additional information that may be
necessary to reach unambiguous conclusions about the origin of the flux
suppression and of the mechanisms behind the acceleration of cosmic rays up to
the highest observed energies.Comment: Invited review prepared for Comptes Rendus Physique (2014), in pres
Regenerative block empirical likelihood for Markov chains
Empirical likelihood is a powerful semi-parametric method increasingly
investigated in the literature. However, most authors essentially focus on an
i.i.d. setting. In the case of dependent data, the classical empirical
likelihood method cannot be directly applied on the data but rather on blocks
of consecutive data catching the dependence structure. Generalization of
empirical likelihood based on the construction of blocks of increasing
nonrandom length have been proposed for time series satisfying mixing
conditions. Following some recent developments in the bootstrap literature, we
propose a generalization for a large class of Markov chains, based on small
blocks of various lengths. Our approach makes use of the regenerative structure
of Markov chains, which allows us to construct blocks which are almost
independent (independent in the atomic case). We obtain the asymptotic validity
of the method for positive recurrent Markov chains and present some simulation
results
Detecting filaments in the ultra-high energy cosmic ray distribution
We propose and test new statistical tools to study the distribution of cosmic
rays based on the use of the Minimal Spanning Tree. The method described is
particularly sensitive to filamentary structures, as those expected to arise
from strong sources of charged cosmic rays which get deflected by intervening
magnetic fields. We also test the method with data available from the AGASA and
SUGAR surface detector arrays.Comment: minor changes, matching the published version in Astroparticle
Physic
Local-global principles for 1-motives
Building upon our arithmetic duality theorems for 1-motives, we prove that
the Manin obstruction related to a finite subquotient \Be (X) of the Brauer
group is the only obstruction to the Hasse principle for rational points on
torsors under semiabelian varieties over a number field, assuming the
finiteness of the Tate-Shaferevich group of the abelian quotient. This theorem
answers a question by Skorobogatov in the semiabelian case and is a key
ingredient of recent work on the elementary obstruction for homogeneous spaces
over number fields. We also establish a Cassels-Tate type dual exact sequence
for 1-motives, and give an application to weak approximation.Comment: 23 pages, minor modification
Arithmetic Duality Theorems for 1-Motives
We prove several duality theorems for the Galois and etale cohomology of
1-motives defined over local and global fields and establish a 12-term
Poitou-Tate type exact sequence. The results give a common generalisation and
sharpening of well-known theorems by Tate on abelian varieties as well as
results by Tate/Nakayama and Kottwitz on algebraic tori.Comment: 44 pages, LaTeX, final version. Section 5 substantially rewritte
Effects of the galactic magnetic field upon large scale anisotropies of extragalactic Cosmic Rays
The large scale pattern in the arrival directions of extragalactic cosmic
rays that reach the Earth is different from that of the flux arriving to the
halo of the Galaxy as a result of the propagation through the galactic magnetic
field. Two different effects are relevant in this process: deflections of
trajectories and (de)acceleration by the electric field component due to the
galactic rotation. The deflection of the cosmic ray trajectories makes the flux
intensity arriving to the halo from some direction to appear reaching the Earth
from another direction. This applies to any intrinsic anisotropy in the
extragalactic distribution or, even in the absence of intrinsic anisotropies,
to the dipolar Compton-Getting anisotropy induced when the observer is moving
with respect to the cosmic rays rest frame. For an observer moving with the
solar system, cosmic rays traveling through far away regions of the Galaxy also
experience an electric force coming from the relative motion (due to the
rotation of the Galaxy) of the local system in which the field can be
considered as being purely magnetic. This produces small changes in the
particles momentum that can originate large scale anisotropies even for an
isotropic extragalactic flux.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
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