Constraining the Emissivity of Ultrahigh Energy Cosmic Rays in the Distant Universe with the Diffuse Gamma-ray Emission
Xiang-Yu Wang, Ruo-Yu Liu, Felix Aharonian

TL;DR
This paper uses gamma-ray background measurements to set upper limits on the emissivity of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays in the distant universe, constraining source models and neutrino flux predictions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method to constrain UHECR emissivity using diffuse gamma-ray observations, providing new bounds on source contributions and neutrino fluxes.
Findings
Upper limits on UHECR emissivity are derived from gamma-ray background data.
The limits suggest GRBs could be significant sources of UHECRs.
Predicted neutrino fluxes are close to current detection capabilities.
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…
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