Testing universality of cosmic-ray acceleration with proton/helium data from AMS and Voyager-1
Nicola Tomassetti

TL;DR
This paper tests whether cosmic-ray acceleration is universal across different sources by analyzing proton and helium data from AMS and Voyager-1, supporting the idea of composition-blind acceleration mechanisms.
Contribution
It proposes a two-component flux model explaining the p/He ratio variation without violating acceleration universality, validated against recent cosmic-ray data.
Findings
Good agreement of model with AMS and Voyager-1 data
Supports universal, composition-blind cosmic-ray acceleration
Discrepancy at very low energies due to solar modulation effects
Abstract
The AMS experiment has recently measured the proton and helium spectra in cosmic rays (CRs) in the GeV-TeV energy region. The two spectra are found to progressively harden at rigidity 200 GV, while the p/He ratio is found to fall off steadily as . The p/He decrease is often interpreted in terms of particle-dependent acceleration, which is in contrast with the universal nature of DSA mechanisms. A different explanation is that the p-He anomaly reflects a flux transition between two components: a sub-TeV flux component (L) provided by hydrogen-rich supernova remnants with soft acceleration spectra, and a multi-TeV component (G) injected by younger sources with amplified magnetic fields and hard spectra. In this scenario the universality of particle acceleration is not violated because both sources provide composition-blind injection spectra. The present…
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