Testing the isotropy of high energy cosmic rays using spherical needlets
Gilles Fa\"y, Jacques Delabrouille, G\'erard Kerkyacharian, Dominique, Picard

TL;DR
This paper introduces nonparametric spherical wavelet-based tests, using needlets, to detect anisotropy in high-energy cosmic ray arrival directions, improving sensitivity to various forms of deviation from isotropy.
Contribution
It develops and compares two novel needlet-based methods for testing isotropy of cosmic rays, with practical implementation and validation through simulations and real data.
Findings
Multiple test performs well at moderate sample sizes
Methods detect a range of anisotropic patterns
Application to Pierre Auger data shows promising results
Abstract
For many decades, ultrahigh energy charged particles of unknown origin that can be observed from the ground have been a puzzle for particle physicists and astrophysicists. As an attempt to discriminate among several possible production scenarios, astrophysicists try to test the statistical isotropy of the directions of arrival of these cosmic rays. At the highest energies, they are supposed to point toward their sources with good accuracy. However, the observations are so rare that testing the distribution of such samples of directional data on the sphere is nontrivial. In this paper, we choose a nonparametric framework that makes weak hypotheses on the alternative distributions and allows in turn to detect various and possibly unexpected forms of anisotropy. We explore two particular procedures. Both are derived from fitting the empirical distribution with wavelet expansions of…
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