Back to Search Start Over

Covering the celestial sphere at ultra-high energies: Full-sky cosmic-ray maps beyond the ankle and the flux suppression

Authors :
Lorenzo Caccianiga
Jonathan Biteau
Dmitri Ivanov
K. Kawata
Sergey Troitsky
Hiroyuki Sagawa
Peter Tinyakov
Daniela Mockler
Igor Tkachev
Toshihiro Fujii
R. Menezes de Almeida
T. Bister
J. P. Lundquist
Toshiyuki Nonaka
D. Harari
A. Di Matteo
Olivier Deligny
Institut de Physique Nucléaire d'Orsay (IPNO)
Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
Pierre Auger
Telescope Array
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11)
Source :
EPJ Web of Conferences, Vol 210, p 01005 (2019), EPJ Web Conf., Ultra High Energy Cosmic Rays, Ultra High Energy Cosmic Rays, Oct 2018, Paris, France. pp.01005, ⟨10.1051/epjconf/201921001005⟩, Les Ulis : EDP Sciences, The European physical journal / Web of Conferences 210, 01005 pp. (2019). doi:10.1051/epjconf/201921001005, [Conference on Ultra High Energy Cosmic Rays], [Conference on Ultra High Energy Cosmic Rays]Conference on Ultra High Energy Cosmic Rays, EPJ web of conferences, 210
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
EDP Sciences, 2019.

Abstract

Despite deflections by Galactic and extragalactic magnetic fields, the distribution of ultra-high energy cosmic rays (UHECRs) over the celestial sphere remains a most promising observable for the identification of their sources. Thanks to a large number of detected events over the past years, a large-scale anisotropy at energies above 8 EeV has been identified, and there are also indications from the Telescope Array and Pierre Auger Collaborations of deviations from isotropy at intermediate angular scales (about 20 degrees) at the highest energies. In this contribution, we map the flux of UHECRs over the full sky at energies beyond each of two major features in the UHECR spectrum – the ankle and the flux suppression -, and we derive limits for anisotropy on different angular scales in the two energy regimes. In particular, full-sky coverage enables constraints on low-order multipole moments without assumptions about the strength of higher-order multipoles. Following previous efforts from the two Collaborations, we build full-sky maps accounting for the relative exposure of the arrays and differences in the energy normalizations. The procedure relies on cross-calibrating the UHECR fluxes reconstructed in the declination band around the celestial equator covered by both observatories. We present full-sky maps at energies above ~ 10 EeV and ~ 50 EeV, using the largest datasets shared across UHECR collaborations to date. We report on anisotropy searches exploiting full-sky coverage and discuss possible constraints on the distribution of UHECR sources.<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
210
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
EPJ Web of Conferences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....28f6825b7c8a4432048510c2b3baaa2b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/201921001005⟩