Cosmic Rays and the Search for a Lorentz Invariance Violation
Wolfgang Bietenholz

TL;DR
This review discusses the ongoing search for Lorentz Invariance Violation in cosmic rays, focusing on ultra high energy cosmic rays, gamma-ray observations, and the implications of potential LIV effects on cosmic ray physics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of theoretical and observational aspects of LIV in cosmic rays, highlighting the importance of ultra high energy phenomena and recent experimental hypotheses.
Findings
No LIV observed so far in cosmic ray data
Ultra high energy cosmic rays test Lorentz invariance at gamma-factors beyond accelerators
Potential LIV effects could significantly alter cosmic ray physics predictions
Abstract
This is an introductory review about the on-going search for a signal of Lorentz Invariance Violation (LIV) in cosmic rays. We first summarise basic aspects of cosmic rays, focusing on rays of ultra high energy (UHECRs). We discuss the Greisen-Zatsepin-Kuz'min (GZK) energy cutoff for cosmic protons, which is predicted due to photopion production in the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). This is a process of modest energy in the proton rest frame. It can be investigated to a high precision in the laboratory, if Lorentz transformations apply even at factors . For heavier nuclei the energy attenuation is even faster due to photo-disintegration, again if this process is Lorentz invariant. Hence the viability of Lorentz symmetry up to tremendous gamma-factors - far beyond accelerator tests - is a central issue. Next we comment on conceptual aspects of Lorentz…
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