318 research outputs found
Extremely high energy cosmic rays and the Auger Observatory
Over the last 30 years or so, a handful of events observed in ground-based
cosmic ray detectors seem to have opened a new window in the field of
high-energy astrophysics. These events have energies exceeding 5x10**19 eV (the
region of the so-called Greisen-Zatsepin-Kuzmin spectral cutoff); they seem to
come from no known astrophysical source; their chemical composition is mostly
unknown; no conventional accelerating mechanism is considered as being able to
explain their production and propagation to earth. Only a dedicated detector
can bring in the high-quality and statistically significant data needed to
solve this long-lasting puzzle: this is the aim of the Auger Observatory
project around which a world-wide collaboration is being mobilized.Comment: 14 pages, no figures, Latex, to be published in Proc. of the 7th Int.
Workshop on Neutrino Telescopes (Venice 27/2-1/3 1996
Magnetars in the Metagalaxy: An Origin for Ultra High Energy Cosmic Rays in the Nearby Universe
I show that the relativistic winds of newly born magnetars with khz initial
spin rates, occurring in all normal galaxies, can accelerate ultrarelativistic
light ions with an E^{-1} injection spectrum, steepening to E^{-2} at higher
energies, with an upper cutoff above 10^{21} eV. Interactions with the CMB
yield a spectrum in good accord with the observed spectrum of Ultra-High Energy
Cosmic Rays (UHECR), if ~ 5-10% of the magnetars are born with voltages
sufficiently high to accelerate the UHECR. The form the spectrum spectrum takes
depends on the gravitational wave losses during the magnetars' early spindown -
pure electromagnetic spindown yields a flattening of the E^3 J(E) spectrum
below 10^{20} eV, while a moderate GZK ``cutoff'' appears if gravitational wave
losses are strong enough. I outline the physics such that the high energy
particles escape with small energy losses from a magnetar's natal supernova,
including Rayleigh-Taylor ``shredding'' of the supernova envelope, expansion of
a relativistic blast wave into the interstellar medium, acceleration of the UHE
ions through surf-riding in the electromgnetic fields of the wind, and escape
of the UHE ions in the rotational equator with negligible radiation loss. The
abundance of interstellar supershells and unusually large supernova remnants
suggests that most of the initial spindown energy is radiated in khz
gravitational waves for several hours after each supernova, with effective
strains from sources at typical distances ~ 3 x 10^{-21}. Such bursts of
gravitational radiation should correlate with bursts of ultra-high energy
particles. The Auger experiment should see such bursts every few years.Comment: 49 pages, 2 Figures, LaTeX (aastex, epsfig, graphicx, float), to be
published June 1, 2003 in the ApJ. Corrected discussion of electromagnetic
surf-riding as the acceleration mechanism and more typos, and reference
Dynamics of vortex tangle without mutual friction in superfluid He
A recent experiment has shown that a tangle of quantized vortices in
superfluid He decayed even at mK temperatures where the normal fluid was
negligible and no mutual friction worked. Motivated by this experiment, this
work studies numerically the dynamics of the vortex tangle without the mutual
friction, thus showing that a self-similar cascade process, whereby large
vortex loops break up to smaller ones, proceeds in the vortex tangle and is
closely related with its free decay. This cascade process which may be covered
with the mutual friction at higher temperatures is just the one at zero
temperature Feynman proposed long ago. The full Biot-Savart calculation is made
for dilute vortices, while the localized induction approximation is used for a
dense tangle. The former finds the elementary scenario: the reconnection of the
vortices excites vortex waves along them and makes them kinked, which could be
suppressed if the mutual friction worked. The kinked parts reconnect with the
vortex they belong to, dividing into small loops. The latter simulation under
the localized induction approximation shows that such cascade process actually
proceeds self-similarly in a dense tangle and continues to make small vortices.
Considering that the vortices of the interatomic size no longer keep the
picture of vortex, the cascade process leads to the decay of the vortex line
density. The presence of the cascade process is supported also by investigating
the classification of the reconnection type and the size distribution of
vortices. The decay of the vortex line density is consistent with the solution
of the Vinen's equation which was originally derived on the basis of the idea
of homogeneous turbulence with the cascade process. The obtained result is
compared with the recent Vinen's theory.Comment: 16 pages, 16 figures, submitted to PR
Determination of absolute neutrino masses from Z-bursts
Ultrahigh energy neutrinos (UHE\nu) scatter on relic neutrinos (R\nu)
producing Z bosons, which can decay hadronically producing protons (Z-burst).
We compare the predicted proton spectrum with the observed ultrahigh energy
cosmic ray (UHECR) spectrum and determine the mass of the heaviest R\nu via a
maximum likelihood analysis. Our prediction depends on the origin of the
power-like part of the UHECR spectrum: m_\nu=2.75^{+1.28}_{-0.97} eV for
Galactic halo and 0.26^{+0.20}_{-0.14} eV for extragalactic (EG) origin. The
necessary UHE\nu flux should be detected in the near future.Comment: slight rewording, revised neutrino fluxes, conclusions unchanged,
version to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
The Extremely High Energy Cosmic Rays
Experimental results from Haverah Park, Yakutsk, AGASA and Fly's Eye are
reviewed. All these experiments work in the energy range above 0.1 EeV. The
'dip' structure around 3 EeV in the energy spectrum is well established by all
the experiments, though the exact position differs slightly. Fly's Eye and
Yakutsk results on the chemical composition indicate that the cosmic rays are
getting lighter over the energy range from 0.1 EeV to 10 EeV, but the exact
fraction is hadronic interaction model dependent, as indicated by the AGASA
analysis. The arrival directions of cosmic rays are largely isotropic, but
interesting features may be starting to emerge. Most of the experimental
results can best be explained with the scenario that an extragalactic component
gradually takes over a galactic population as energy increases and cosmic rays
at the highest energies are dominated by particles coming from extragalactic
space. However, identification of the extragalactic sources has not yet been
successful because of limited statistics and the resolution of the data.Comment: The review paper including 21 figures. 39 pages: To be published in
Journal of Physics
Search for ultra-high energy photons using air showers
The observation of photons with energies above 10^18 eV would open a new
window in cosmic-ray research, with possible impact on astrophysics, particle
physics, cosmology and fundamental physics. Current and planned air shower
experiments, particularly the Pierre Auger Observatory, offer an unprecedented
opportunity to search for such photons and to complement efforts of
multimessenger observations of the universe. We summarize motivation,
achievements, and prospects of the search for ultra-high energy photons.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, invited brief review for Modern Physics Letters
A (MPLA
On formation of a locally self-similar collapse in the incompressible Euler equations
The paper addresses the question of existence of a locally self-similar
blow-up for the incompressible Euler equations. Several exclusion results are
proved based on the -condition for velocity or vorticity and for a range
of scaling exponents. In particular, in dimensions if in self-similar
variables and u \sim \frac{1}{t^{\a/(1+\a)}}, then the blow-up
does not occur provided \a >N/2 or -1<\a\leq N/p. This includes the
case natural for the Navier-Stokes equations. For \a = N/2 we exclude
profiles with an asymptotic power bounds of the form |y|^{-N-1+\d} \lesssim
|u(y)| \lesssim |y|^{1-\d}. Homogeneous near infinity solutions are eliminated
as well except when homogeneity is scaling invariant.Comment: A revised version with improved notation, proofs, etc. 19 page
Grand Unification Signal from Ultra High Energy Cosmic Rays?
The spectrum of ultrahigh energy (above \approx 10^{9} GeV) cosmic rays is
consistent with the decay of GUT scale particles. The predicted mass is
m_X=10^b GeV, where b=14.6_{-1.7}^{+1.6}.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures one figure removed, one table added, conclusions
essentially remained the same within errorbar
Ultra-High Energy Cosmic Rays, Superheavy Long-Living Particles, and Matter Creation after Inflation
The highest energy cosmic rays, above the Greisen-Zatsepin-Kuzmin cut-off of
cosmic ray spectrum, may be produced in decays of superheavy long-living
X-particles. We conjecture that these particles may be produced naturally in
the early Universe from vacuum fluctuations during inflation and may constitute
a considerable fraction of Cold Dark Matter. We predict a new cut-off in the
UHE cosmic ray spectrum E_{cut-off} < m_inflaton \approx 10^{13} GeV, the exact
position of the cut-off and the shape of the cosmic ray spectrum beyond the GZK
cut-off being determined by the QCD quark/gluon fragmentation. The Pierre Auger
Project installation might discover this phenomenon.Comment: LaTeX, 8 page
Anisotropy studies around the galactic centre at EeV energies with the Auger Observatory
Data from the Pierre Auger Observatory are analyzed to search for
anisotropies near the direction of the Galactic Centre at EeV energies. The
exposure of the surface array in this part of the sky is already significantly
larger than that of the fore-runner experiments. Our results do not support
previous findings of localized excesses in the AGASA and SUGAR data. We set an
upper bound on a point-like flux of cosmic rays arriving from the Galactic
Centre which excludes several scenarios predicting sources of EeV neutrons from
Sagittarius . Also the events detected simultaneously by the surface and
fluorescence detectors (the `hybrid' data set), which have better pointing
accuracy but are less numerous than those of the surface array alone, do not
show any significant localized excess from this direction.Comment: Matches published versio
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