Extragalactic cosmic rays and their signatures
V. Berezinsky

TL;DR
This paper analyzes signatures of ultra-high-energy cosmic ray propagation, challenging the traditional interpretation of the ankle as a galactic-extragalactic transition and supporting the dip model with spectral feature confirmations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of spectral features, composition data, and anisotropy, arguing for a transition at the second knee and reconciling conflicting composition measurements.
Findings
The dip model's spectral shape is confirmed by multiple detectors.
The ankle is likely not the galactic-extragalactic transition point.
Auger data suggests a transition to heavier nuclei at higher energies.
Abstract
The signatures of UHE proton propagation through CMB are pair-production dip and GZK cutoff. The visible manifestations of these spectral features are ankle, beginning of GZK cutoff in the differential spectrum and E_{1/2} in integral spectrum. Observed in all experiments, the ankle is usually interpreted as transition from galactic to extragalactic cosmic rays. Using the mass composition measured by HiRes, Telescope Array (TA) and Auger detectors at energy (1-3) EeV, calculated anisotropy of galactic cosmic rays at these energies, and the elongation curves we strongly argue against the interpretation of the ankle given above. The transition must occur at lower energy, most probably at the second knee as the dip model predicts. The other prediction of this model, the shape of the dip, is well confirmed by HiRes, TA, AGASA and Yakutsk detectors, and, after recalibration of energies, by…
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