# Ultra-High-Energy Cosmic Rays from Radio Galaxies

**Authors:** Bj\"orn Eichmann, J\"org P. Rachen, Lukas Merten, Arjen van Vliet,, Julia Becker Tjus

arXiv: 1701.06792 · 2018-03-09

## TL;DR

This study models ultra-high-energy cosmic rays from radio galaxies, showing that two specific sources, Cygnus A and Centaurus A, can explain observed cosmic ray features when considering magnetic field effects.

## Contribution

It introduces a systematic simulation approach accounting for individual radio galaxy characteristics and magnetic fields, highlighting the dominant roles of Cygnus A and Centaurus A in UHECR observations.

## Key findings

- Cygnus A contributes mostly light nuclei up to 6×10^{19} eV.
- Centaurus A dominates heavy nuclei above 6×10^{19} eV.
- Extragalactic magnetic fields likely isotropize UHECRs from Cygnus A.

## Abstract

Radio galaxies are intensively discussed as the sources of cosmic rays observed above about $3\,{\times}\,10^{18}\,\text{eV}$, called ultra-high energy cosmic rays (UHECRs). We present a first, systematic approach that takes the individual characteristics of these sources into account, as well as the impact of the extragalactic magnetic-field structures up to a distance of 120 Mpc. We use a mixed simulation setup, based on 3D simulations of UHECRs ejected by observed, individual radio galaxies taken out to a distance of 120 Mpc, and on 1D simulations over a continuous source distribution contributing from beyond 120 Mpc. Additionally, we include the ultra-luminous radio galaxy Cygnus A at a distance of about $250\,$Mpc, as its contribution is so strong that it must be considered as an individual point source. The implementation of the UHECR ejection in our simulation setup is based on a detailed consideration of the physics of radio jets and standard first-order Fermi acceleration. We show that the average contribution of radio galaxies taken over a very large volume cannot explain the observed features of UHECRs measured at Earth. However, we obtain excellent agreement with the spectrum, composition, and arrival-direction distribution of UHECRs measured by the Pierre Auger Observatory, if we assume that most UHECRs observed arise from only two sources: The ultra-luminous radio galaxy Cygnus A, providing a mostly light composition of nuclear species dominating up to about $6\,{\times}\,10^{19}\,$eV, and the nearest radio galaxy Centaurus A, providing a heavy composition dominating above $6\,{\times}\,10^{19}\,$eV. Here we have to assume that extragalactic magnetic fields out to 250 Mpc, which we did not include in the simulation, are able to isotropize the UHECR events at about 8 EeV arriving from Cygnus A.

## Full text

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## Figures

58 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.06792/full.md

## References

139 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.06792/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.06792