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      Constraining the Emissivity of Ultrahigh Energy Cosmic Rays in the Distant Universe with the Diffuse Gamma-ray Emission

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          Abstract

          Ultra-high cosmic rays (UHECRs) with energies >10^19 eV emitted at cosmological distances will be attenuated by cosmic microwave and infrared background radiation through photohadronic processes. Lower energy extra-galactic cosmic rays (~10^18-10^19 eV) can only travel a linear distance smaller than ~Gpc in a Hubble time due to the diffusion if the extra-galactic magnetic fields are as strong as nano Gauss. These prevent us from directly observing most of the UHECRs in the universe, and thus the observed UHECR intensity reflects only the emissivity in the nearby universe within hundreds of Mpc. However, UHECRs in the distant universe, through interactions with the cosmic background photons, produce UHE electrons and gamma-rays that in turn initiate electromagnetic cascades on cosmic background photons. This secondary cascade radiation forms part of the extragalactic diffuse GeV-TeV gamma-ray radiation and, unlike the original UHECRs, is observable. Motivated by new measurements of extragalactic diffuse gamma-ray background radiation by Fermi/LAT, we obtained upper limits placed on the UHECR emissivity in the distant universe by requiring that the cascade radiation they produce not exceed the observed levels. By comparison with the gamma-ray emissivity of candidate UHECR sources (such as GRBs and AGNs) at high-redshifts, we find that the obtained upper limit for a flat proton spectrum is ~10^1.5 times larger than the gamma-ray emissivity in GRBs and ~10 times smaller than the gamma-ray emissivity in BL Lac objects. In the case of iron nuclei composition, the derived upper limit of the UHECR emissivity is a factor of 3-5 times higher. Robust upper limit on the cosmogenic neutrino flux is further obtained, which is marginally reachable by the Icecube detector and the next-generation detector JEM-EUSO.

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          An Unexpectedly Swift Rise in the Gamma-ray Burst Rate

          The association of long gamma-ray bursts with supernovae naturally suggests that the cosmic GRB rate should trace the star formation history. Finding otherwise would provide important clues concerning these rare, curious phenomena. Using a new estimate of Swift GRB energetics to construct a sample of 36 luminous GRBs with redshifts in the range z=0-4, we find evidence of enhanced evolution in the GRB rate, with ~4 times as many GRBs observed at z~4 than expected from star formation measurements. This direct and empirical demonstration of needed additional evolution is a new result. It is consistent with theoretical expectations from metallicity effects, but other causes remain possible, and we consider them systematically.
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            Limitations on the Photo-disintegration Process as a Source of VHE Photons

            We consider whether photo-disintegration is ever able to provide an effective mechanism for the production of VHE \(\gamma\)-ray emission from astrophysical sources. We find that the efficiency of this process is always smaller by a factor \(A/Z^{2}\) (\(\sim 4/A\)) than that of nuclei cooling through Bethe-Heitler pair-production. Furthermore, for sources optically thin to TeV emission, we find that the efficiency of this process can be no more than \(3\times 10^{-5}(R_{\rm source}/R_{\rm Larmor})\), where \(R_{\rm source}\) is the source size and \(R_{\rm Larmor}\) is the CR nuclei Larmor radius. We conclude that this process is unable to provide an effective mechanism for VHE \(\gamma\)-ray emission from astrophysical sources.
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              Author and article information

              Journal
              18 March 2011
              2011-07-22
              Article
              10.1088/0004-637X/736/2/112
              1103.3574
              182f85d6-f555-4193-8ff8-dc4704d76330

              http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

              History
              Custom metadata
              Astrophys.J.736:112,2011
              14 pages, 8 figures, Replaced to match the published version
              astro-ph.HE

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