Low-luminosity gamma-ray bursts as the sources of ultrahigh-energy cosmic ray nuclei
B. Theodore Zhang, Kohta Murase, Shigeo S. Kimura, Shunsaku Horiuchi, and Peter M\'esz\'aros

TL;DR
This paper investigates low-luminosity gamma-ray bursts as potential sources of ultrahigh-energy cosmic ray nuclei, analyzing their composition, survivability, and compatibility with observational data, and proposing models consistent with recent cosmic ray and starburst galaxy correlations.
Contribution
It introduces new nuclear composition models for LL GRBs, including Si-rich and hypernova ejecta scenarios, and demonstrates their compatibility with Auger cosmic ray data.
Findings
Si-rich and hypernova models fit Auger data well
Nuclei survivability is higher in typical LL GRBs
Models are consistent with starburst galaxy correlations
Abstract
Recent results from the Pierre Auger Collaboration have shown that the composition of ultrahigh-energy cosmic rays (UHECRs) becomes gradually heavier with increasing energy. Although gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) have been promising sources of UHECRs, it is still unclear whether they can account for the Auger results because of their unknown nuclear composition of ejected UHECRs. In this work, we revisit the possibility that low-luminosity GRBs (LL GRBs) act as the sources of UHECR nuclei, and give new predictions based on the intrajet nuclear composition models considering progenitor dependencies. We find that the nuclear component in the jet can be divided into two groups according to the mass fraction of silicon nuclei, Si-free and Si-rich. Motivated by the connection between LL GRBs and transrelativistic supernovae, we also consider the hypernova ejecta composition. Then, we discuss the…
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