Constraining models for the origin of ultra-highenergy cosmic rays with a novel combined analysis of arrival directions, spectrum, and composition data measured at the Pierre Auger Observatory
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
IOP Publishing
Materia
Ultra high energy cosmic rays Cosmic ray experiments Active galactic nuclei
Fecha
2024-01-11Referencia bibliográfica
A. Abdul Halim et al. (Pierre Auger Collaboration). Constraining models for the origin of ultra-highenergy cosmic rays with a novel combined analysis of arrival directions, spectrum, and composition data measured at the Pierre Auger Observatory. JCAP01(2024)022 [10.1088/1475-7516/2024/01/022]
Patrocinador
Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad (FPA2017-85114-P and PID2019-104676GB-C32); Xunta de Galicia (ED431C 2017/07); Junta de Andalucía (SOMM17/6104/UGR, P18-FR-4314) Feder Funds; RENATA Red Nacional Temática de Astropartículas (FPA2015-68783-REDT); María de Maeztu Unit of Excellence (MDM-2016-0692); National Science Foundation, Grant No. 0450696; The Grainger Foundation; Marie Curie-IRSES/EPLANET; European Particle Physics Latin American Network; UNESCOResumen
The combined fit of the measured energy spectrum and shower maximum depth
distributions of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays is known to constrain the parameters of
astrophysical models with homogeneous source distributions. Studies of the distribution of
the cosmic-ray arrival directions show a better agreement with models in which a fraction of
the flux is non-isotropic and associated with the nearby radio galaxy Centaurus A or with
catalogs such as that of starburst galaxies. Here, we present a novel combination of both
analyses by a simultaneous fit of arrival directions, energy spectrum, and composition data
measured at the Pierre Auger Observatory. The model takes into account a rigidity-dependent
magnetic field blurring and an energy-dependent evolution of the catalog contribution shaped
by interactions during propagation.
We find that a model containing a flux contribution from the starburst galaxy catalog
of around 20% at 40 EeV with a magnetic field blurring of around 20º for a rigidity of
10EV provides a fair simultaneous description of all three observables. The starburst galaxy
model is favored with a significance of 4.5σ (considering experimental systematic effects)
compared to a reference model with only homogeneously distributed background sources.
By investigating a scenario with Centaurus A as a single source in combination with the
homogeneous background, we confirm that this region of the sky provides the dominant
contribution to the observed anisotropy signal. Models containing a catalog of jetted active
galactic nuclei whose flux scales with the γ-ray emission are, however, disfavored as they
cannot adequately describe the measured arrival directions.





