132 research outputs found
Inhomogeneous extragalactic magnetic fields and the second knee in the cosmic ray spectrum
Various experiments indicate the existence of a second knee around energy
E=3.10^{17} eV in the cosmic ray spectrum. This feature could be the signature
of the end of the galactic component and of the emergence of the extragalactic
one, provided that the latter cuts off at low energies. Recent analytical
calculations have shown that this cut-off could be a consequence of the
existence of extragalactic magnetic fields: low energy protons diffuse on
extragalactic magnetic fields and cannot reach the observer within a given
time. We study the influence of inhomogeneous magnetic fields on the magnetic
horizon, using a new semi-analytical propagation code. Our results indicate
that, at a fixed value of the volume averaged magnetic field , the amplitude
of the low energy cut-off is mainly controled by the strength of magnetic
fields in the voids of the large scale structure distribution.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures. Version to appear in PRD (minor changes
Ultrahigh Energy Cosmic Rays and Black Hole Mergers
The recent detection of the gravitational wave source GW150914 by the LIGO
collaboration motivates a speculative source for the origin of ultrahigh energy
cosmic rays as a possible byproduct of the immense energies achieved in black
hole mergers, provided that the black holes have spin as seems inevitable and
there are relic magnetic fields and disk debris remaining from the formation of
the black holes or from their accretion history. We argue that given the modest
efficiency required per event per unit of gravitational wave energy
release, merging black holes potentially provide an environment for
accelerating cosmic rays to ultrahigh energies.Comment: 4 pages, version to appear in ApJ Lett., minor changes, but one
significant new point: connection made with fast radio burst
What can we learn from a sharply falling positron fraction?
Recent results from the AMS-02 data have confirmed that the cosmic ray
positron fraction increases with energy between 10 and 200GeV. This quantity
should not exceed 50%, and it is hence expected that it will either converge
towards 50% or fall. We study the possibility that future data may show the
positron fraction dropping down abruptly to the level expected with only
secondary production, and forecast the implications of such a feature in term
of possible injection mechanisms that include both Dark Matter and pulsars.Comment: Proceedings to the SUGAR 2015 conferenc
Distortion of the ultrahigh energy cosmic ray flux from rare transient sources in inhomogeneous extragalactic magnetic fields
Detecting and characterizing the anisotropy pattern of the arrival directions
of the highest energy cosmic rays are crucial steps towards the identification
of their sources. We discuss a possible distortion of the cosmic ray flux
induced by the anisotropic and inhomogeneous distribution of extragalactic
magnetic fields in cases where sources of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays are rare
transient phenomena, such as gamma-ray bursts and/or newly born magnetars. This
distortion does not involve an angular deflection but the modulation of the
flux related to the probability of seeing the source on an experiment lifetime.
To quantify this distortion, we construct sky maps of the arrival directions of
these highest energy cosmic rays for various magnetic field configurations and
appeal to statistical tests proposed in the literature. We conclude that this
distortion cannot affect present experiments but should be considered when
performing anisotropy studies with future large-scale experiments that record
as many as hundreds of events above 6x10^19 eV.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, accepted by A&
Synchrotron pair halo and echo emission from blazars in the cosmic web: application to extreme TeV blazars
High frequency peaked high redshift blazars, are extreme in the sense that
their spectrum is particularly hard and peaks at TeV energies. Standard
leptonic scenarios require peculiar source parameters and/or a special setup in
order to account for these observations. Electromagnetic cascades seeded by
ultra-high energy cosmic rays (UHECR) in the intergalactic medium have also
been invoked, assuming a very low intergalactic magnetic field (IGMF). Here we
study the synchrotron emission of UHECR secondaries produced in blazars located
in magnetised environments, and show that it can provide an alternative
explanation to these challenged channels, for sources embedded in structured
regions with magnetic field strengths of the order of G. To
demonstrate this, we focus on three extreme blazars: 1ES 0229+200, RGB
J0710+591, and 1ES 1218+304. We model the expected gamma-ray signal from these
sources through a combination of numerical Monte Carlo simulations and solving
the kinetic equations of the particles in our simulations, and explore the
UHECR source and intergalactic medium parameter space to test the robustness of
the emission. We show that the generated synchrotron pair halo/echo flux at the
peak energy is not sensitive to variations in the overall IGMF strength. This
signal is unavoidable in contrast to the inverse Compton pair halo/echo
intensity, which is appealing in view of the large uncertainties on the IGMF in
voids of large scale structure. It is also shown that the variability of blazar
gamma-ray emission can be accommodated by the synchrotron emission of secondary
products of UHE neutral beams if these are emitted by UHECR accelerators inside
magnetised regions.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, to appear in A&
The fate of ultrahigh energy nuclei in the immediate environment of young fast-rotating pulsars
Young, fast-rotating neutron stars are promising candidate sources for the
production of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays (UHECRs). The interest in this model
has recently been boosted by the latest chemical composition measurements of
cosmic rays, that seem to show the presence of a heavy nuclear component at the
highest energies. Neutrons stars, with their metal-rich surfaces, are
potentially interesting sources of such nuclei, but some open issues remain: 1)
is it possible to extract these nuclei from the star's surface? 2) Do the
nuclei survive the severe conditions present in the magnetosphere of the
neutron star? 3) What happens to the surviving nuclei once they enter the wind
that is launched outside the light cylinder? In this paper we address these
issues in a quantitative way, proving that for the most reasonable range of
neutron star surface temperatures (K), a large fraction of heavy
nuclei survive photo-disintegration losses. These processes, together with
curvature losses and acceleration in the star's electric potential, lead to
injection of nuclei with a chemical composition that is mixed, even if only
iron is extracted from the surface. We show that under certain conditions the
chemical composition injected into the wind region is compatible with that
required in previous work based on purely phenomenological arguments (typically
protons, CNO and Fe), and provides a
reasonable explanation of the mass abundance inferred from ultra high energy
data.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures, accepted in JCAP, minor modification
Ultrahigh Energy Cosmic Ray Nuclei from Extragalactic Pulsars and the effect of their Galactic counterparts
The acceleration of ultrahigh energy nuclei in fast spinning newborn pulsars
can explain the observed spectrum of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays and the trend
towards heavier nuclei for energies above eV as reported by the
Auger Observatory. Pulsar acceleration implies a hard injection spectrum () due to pulsar spin down and a maximum energy eV due to the limit on the spin rate of neutron stars. We have
previously shown that the escape through the young supernova remnant softens
the spectrum, decreases slightly the maximum energy, and generates secondary
nuclei. Here we show that the distribution of pulsar birth periods and the
effect of propagation in the interstellar and intergalactic media modifies the
combined spectrum of all pulsars. By assuming a normal distribution of pulsar
birth periods centered at 300 ms, we show that the contribution of
extragalactic pulsar births to the ultrahigh energy cosmic ray spectrum
naturally gives rise to a contribution to very high energy cosmic rays (VHECRs,
between and eV) by Galactic pulsar births. The required
injected composition to fit the observed spectrum depends on the absolute
energy scale, which is uncertain, differing between Auger Observatory and
Telescope Array. The contribution of Galactic pulsar births can also bridge the
gap between predictions for cosmic ray acceleration in supernova remnants and
the observed spectrum just below the ankle, depending on the composition of the
cosmic rays that escape the supernova remnant and the diffusion behavior of
VHECRs in the Galaxy.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figure, JCAP submitte
Do asteroids evaporate near pulsars? Induction heating by pulsar waves revisited
We investigate the evaporation of close-by pulsar companions, such as
planets, asteroids, and white dwarfs, by induction heating. Assuming that the
outflow energy is dominated by a Poynting flux (or pulsar wave) at the location
of the companions, we calculate their evaporation timescales, by applying the
Mie theory. Depending on the size of the companion compared to the incident
electromagnetic wavelength, the heating regime varies and can lead to a total
evaporation of the companion. In particular, we find that inductive heating is
mostly inefficient for small pulsar companions, although it is generally
considered the dominant process. Small objects like asteroids can survive
induction heating for years at distances as small as from
the neutron star. For degenerate companions, induction heating cannot lead to
evaporation and another source of heating (likely by kinetic energy of the
pulsar wind) has to be considered. It was recently proposed that bodies
orbiting pulsars are the cause of fast radio bursts; the present results
explain how those bodies can survive in the pulsar's highly energetic
environment.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, accepted by A&
Strangelets and the TeV-PeV cosmic-ray anisotropies
Several experiments (e.g., Milagro and IceCube) have reported the presence in
the sky of regions with significant excess in the arrival direction
distributions of Galactic cosmic rays in the TeV to PeV energy range. Here we
study the possibility that these hotspots are a manifestation of the peculiar
nature of these cosmic rays, and of the presence of molecular clouds near the
sources. We propose that stable quark matter lumps or so-called "strangelets"
can be emitted in the course of the transition of a neutron star to a more
compact astrophysical object. A fraction of these massive particles would lose
their charge by spallation or electron capture in molecular clouds located in
the immediate neighborhood of their source, and propagate rectilinearly without
decaying further, hence inducing anisotropies of the order of the cloud size.
With reasonable astrophysical assumptions regarding the neutron star transition
rate, strangelet injection and neutralization rates, we can reproduce
successfully the observed hotspot characteristics and their distribution in the
sky.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, submitted to PR
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