The shape of the cosmic ray proton spectrum
Paolo Lipari, Silvia Vernetto

TL;DR
Recent cosmic ray proton measurements reveal complex spectral features including a hardening around a few hundred GeV and a softening near 10^4 GeV, challenging existing models of Galactic cosmic rays and impacting neutrino background estimates.
Contribution
This paper synthesizes recent observational data to highlight spectral features in cosmic ray protons and discusses their implications for cosmic ray origin models.
Findings
Confirmation of spectral hardening around a few hundred GeV.
Observation of spectral softening near 10^4 GeV.
Indications of additional spectral features below the Knee.
Abstract
Recent observations of cosmic ray protons in the energy range --~GeV have revealed that the spectrum cannot be described by a simple power law. A hardening of the spectrum around an energy of order few hundred~GeV, first observed by the magnetic spectrometers PAMELA and AMS02, has now been confirmed by several calorimeter detectors (ATIC, CREAM, CALET, NUCLEON and DAMPE). These new measurements reach higher energy and indicate that the hardening corresponds to a larger step in spectral index than what estimated by the magnetic spectrometers. Data at still higher energy (by CREAM, NUCLEON and DAMPE) show that the proton spectrum undergoes a marked softening at ~GeV. Understanding the origin of these unexpected spectral features is a significant challenge for models of the Galactic cosmic rays. An important open question is whether additional features are…
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