Anisotropy vs chemical composition at ultra-high energies
Martin Lemoine (IAP), Eli Waxman (Weizmann Institute of Science)

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel method to test the chemical composition of ultra-high energy cosmic rays using anisotropy patterns, and applies it to Pierre Auger Observatory data to infer source characteristics and composition.
Contribution
It introduces a composition test based on anisotropy energy dependence that is robust against magnetic field modeling and source parameters.
Findings
Heavy nuclei anisotropy implies stronger proton anisotropy at lower energies.
Current PAO data suggests the Cen A clustering is unlikely due to heavy nuclei.
Active galaxies are unlikely sources of observed ultra-high energy cosmic rays.
Abstract
This paper proposes and discusses a test of the chemical composition of ultra-high energy cosmic rays that relies on the anisotropy patterns measured as a function of energy. In particular, we show that if one records an anisotropy signal produced by heavy nuclei of charge Z above an energy E_{thr}, one should record an even stronger (possibly much stronger) anisotropy at energies >E_{thr}/Z due to the proton component that is expected to be associated with the sources of the heavy nuclei. This conclusion remains robust with respect to the parameters characterizing the sources and it does not depend at all on the modelling of astrophysical magnetic fields. As a concrete example, we apply this test to the most recent data of the Pierre Auger Observatory. Assuming that the anisotropy reported above 55EeV is not a statistical accident, and that no significant anisotropy has been observed…
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