Blazars as Ultra-High-Energy Cosmic-Ray Sources: Implications for TeV Gamma-Ray Observations
Kohta Murase, Charles D. Dermer, Hajime Takami, Giulia Migliori

TL;DR
This paper explores whether blazars can accelerate ultra-high-energy cosmic rays and how their gamma-ray spectra can reveal hadronic processes, emphasizing the importance of structured magnetic fields and future gamma-ray observations.
Contribution
It demonstrates the potential of TeV gamma-ray observations to test blazars as sources of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays and analyzes the effects of magnetic fields on cascade emissions.
Findings
UHECRs from blazars are likely heavy nuclei, not protons.
Intergalactic cascade emissions can explain some TeV spectra.
Future gamma-ray telescopes can test UHECR acceleration in blazars.
Abstract
The spectra of BL Lac objects and Fanaroff-Riley I radio galaxies are commonly explained by the one-zone leptonic synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) model. Spectral modeling of correlated multiwavelength data gives the comoving magnetic field strength, the bulk outflow Lorentz factor and the emission region size. Assuming the validity of the SSC model, the Hillas condition shows that only in rare cases can such sources accelerate protons to much above 10^19 eV, so > 10^20 eV ultra-high-energy cosmic rays (UHECRs) are likely to be heavy ions if powered by this type of radio-loud active galactic nuclei (AGN). Survival of nuclei is shown to be possible in TeV BL Lacs and misaligned counterparts with weak photohadronic emissions. Another signature of hadronic production is intergalactic UHECR-induced cascade emission, which is an alternative explanation of the TeV spectra of some extreme…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
