Fossil AGN jets as ultra high energy particle accelerators
Gregory Benford, R.J. Protheroe

TL;DR
This paper proposes that fossil remnants of AGN jets, resembling laboratory magnetic structures, can accelerate cosmic rays to ultra-high energies through magnetic reconnection, potentially explaining observed cosmic ray features.
Contribution
It introduces a novel mechanism where fossil AGN jet structures act as large-scale particle accelerators via magnetic reconnection, affecting cosmic ray composition and energy spectrum.
Findings
Fossil AGN structures can accelerate cosmic rays up to ultra-high energies.
The energy cutoff depends on fossil parameters and is rigidity-dependent.
This mechanism may explain cosmic ray composition changes and offset GZK losses.
Abstract
Remnants of AGN jets and their surrounding cocoons leave colossal magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) fossil structures storing total energies ~10^{60} erg. The original active galacic nucleus (AGN) may be dead but the fossil will retain its stable configuration resembling the reversed-field pinch (RFP) encountered in laboratory MHD experiments. In an RFP the longitudinal magnetic field changes direction at a critical distance from the axis, leading to magnetic re-connection there, and to slow decay of the large-scale RFP field. We show that this field decay induces large-scale electric fields which can accelerate cosmic rays with an E^{-2} power-law up to ultra-high energies with a cut-off depending on the fossil parameters. The cut-off is expected to be rigidity dependent, implying the observed composition would change from light to heavy close to the cut-off if one or two nearby AGN fossils…
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