Cosmic rays: the spectrum and chemical composition from $10^{10}$ to $10^{20}$ eV
C. J. Todero Peixoto, Vitor de Souza, Peter L. Biermann

TL;DR
This paper models the cosmic ray spectrum and composition from 10^10 to 10^20 eV, integrating data from multiple experiments and proposing an astrophysical scenario involving only our Galaxy and Cen A as sources.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model that explains the observed cosmic ray flux and composition across a wide energy range, including a transition region and an unexplained extra component.
Findings
Model successfully describes flux data from multiple experiments.
Identifies a transition region between 10^16 and 10^18 eV with an extra component.
Explains the smooth transition from space-based to ground-based measurements.
Abstract
The production of energetic particles in the universe remains one of the great mysteries of modern science. The mechanisms of acceleration in astrophysical sources and the details about the propagation through the galactic and extragalactic media are still to be defined. In recent years, the cosmic ray flux has been measured with high precision in the energy range from \energy{10} to \energyEV{20.5} by several experiments using different techniques. In some energy ranges, it has been possible to determine the flux of individual elements (hydrogen to iron nuclei). This paper explores an astrophysical scenario in which only our Galaxy and the radio galaxy Cen A produce all particles measured on Earth in the energy range from \energy{10} to \energyEV{20.5}. Data from AMS-02, CREAM, KASCADE, KASCADE-Grande and the Pierre Auger Observatories are considered. The model developed here is able…
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