What can cosmic-ray knees reveal about source populations?
Myrto Falalaki, Vasiliki Pavlidou

TL;DR
This paper investigates how the features of cosmic-ray knees can reveal information about the source populations, considering diversity among sources and comparing model predictions with observations.
Contribution
It introduces a simple theoretical model linking source population diversity to observable knee features in cosmic-ray spectra, highlighting robust trends and their implications.
Findings
Spectrum slope step is ~0.5, weakly decreasing with diversity.
Composition breaks first in the spectrum.
Differences between composition and flux break energies increase with diversity.
Abstract
Cosmic ray (CR) knees (spectral steepenings) encode information on CR accelerator populations. We seek population features that imprint onto knee observables in a manner that is robust enough to be discernible even in the presence of significant systematics in CR data. In particular, we explore how diversity among population members could imprint on the knee phenomenology, under the assumption that a knee is due to a fixed-rigidity cutoff in the source spectra. We use a simple theoretical model for a population of CR accelerators. Each population member accelerates CR to a power-law spectrum, up to a cutoff rigidity. We allow for variance among members, in cutoff rigidity and power-law slope. We find that: (a) the slope step of the spectrum is , decreasing weakly with increasing spread in either property; (b) composition always breaks first; (c) the difference between the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Particle Detector Development and Performance · Radiation Detection and Scintillator Technologies
