Artist's illustration of the extremely
energetic cosmic ray observed by a surface detector array of the Telescope
Array experiment, named "Amaterasu particle." Credit: Osaka
Metropolitan University/L-INSIGHT, Kyoto University/Ryuunosuke Takeshige
In
1991, the University of Utah Fly's Eye experiment detected the highest-energy
cosmic ray ever observed. Later dubbed the Oh-My-God particle, the cosmic ray's
energy shocked astrophysicists. Nothing in our galaxy had the power to produce
it, and the particle had more energy than was theoretically possible for cosmic
rays traveling to Earth from other galaxies. Simply put, the particle should
not exist.
The Telescope Array has since observed
more than 30 ultra-high-energy cosmic rays, though none approaching the Oh-My-God-level energy.
No observations have yet revealed their origin or how they are able to travel
to Earth.
On May 27, 2021, the Telescope Array
experiment detected the second-highest extreme-energy cosmic ray. At 2.4 x 1020eV, the
energy of this single subatomic particle is equivalent to dropping a brick on
your toe from waist height. Led by the University of Utah (the U) and the
University of Tokyo, the experiment used the Telescope Array, which consists of
507 surface detector stations arranged in a square grid that covers 700 km2 (~270 miles2) outside
of Delta, Utah, in the state's West Desert.
The event triggered 23 detectors at the north-west region of the Telescope Array, splashing across 48 km2 (18.5 mi2). Its arrival direction appeared to be from the Local Void, an empty area of space bordering the Milky Way galaxy.
The recorded signal and event animation of the
extremely energetic particle, dubbed the "Amaterasu" particle.
Credit: Osaka Metropolitan University
"The particles are so high
energy, they shouldn't be affected by galactic and extra-galactic magnetic
fields. You should be able to point to where they come from in the sky,"
said John Matthews, Telescope Array co-spokesperson at the U and co-author of
the study. "But in the case of the Oh-My-God particle and this new particle, you trace its trajectory to its source and there's
nothing high energy enough to have produced it. That's the mystery of this—what
the heck is going on?"
In their observation published in the journal Science, an international collaboration of
researchers describe the ultra-high-energy cosmic ray, evaluate its
characteristics, and conclude that the rare phenomena might follow particle physics unknown to science.
The researchers named it the
Amaterasu particle after the sun goddess in Japanese mythology. The Oh-My-God
and the Amaterasu particles were detected using different observation
techniques, confirming that while rare, these ultra-high energy events are real.
"These events seem like
they're coming from completely different places in the sky. It's not like
there's one mysterious source," said John Belz, professor at the U and
co-author of the study. "It could be defects in the structure of spacetime,
colliding cosmic strings. I mean, I'm just spit-balling crazy ideas that people
are coming up with because there's not a conventional explanation."
Natural particle accelerators
Cosmic rays are echoes of violent
celestial events that have stripped matter to its subatomic structures and
hurled it through universe at nearly the speed of light. Essentially cosmic
rays are charged particles with a wide range of energies consisting of positive
protons, negative electrons, or entire atomic nuclei that travel through space and rain down onto
Earth nearly constantly.
Cosmic rays hit Earth's upper atmosphere and blasts apart the nucleus of oxygen and nitrogen gas, generating many secondary particles. These travel a short distance in the atmosphere and repeat the process, building a shower of billions of secondary particles that scatter to the surface. The footprint of this secondary shower is massive and requires that detectors cover an area as large as the Telescope Array. The surface detectors utilize a suite of instrumentation that gives researchers information about each cosmic ray; the timing of the signal shows its trajectory and the amount of charged particles hitting each detector reveals the primary particle's energy.
Artist's illustration of
ultra-high-energy cosmic ray astronomy to clarify extremely energetic phenomena
in contrast to a weaker cosmic ray that is impacted by electromagnetic fields.
Credit: Osaka Metropolitan University/Kyoto University/Ryuunosuke Takeshige
Because particles have a charge,
their flight path resembles a ball in a pinball machine as they
zigzag against the electromagnetic fields through the cosmic microwave background. It's nearly impossible to trace the trajectory of
most cosmic rays, which lie on the low- to middle-end of the energy spectrum.
Even high-energy cosmic rays are distorted by the microwave background.
Particles with Oh-My-God and Amaterasu energy blast through intergalactic space
relatively unbent. Only the most powerful of celestial events can produce them.
"Things that people think of
as energetic, like supernova, are nowhere near energetic enough for this. You
need huge amounts of energy, really high magnetic fields to confine the
particle while it gets accelerated," said Matthews.
Ultra-high-energy cosmic rays must
exceed 5 x 1019 eV. This means that a single subatomic particle
carries the same kinetic energy as a major league pitcher's fastball and has
tens of millions of times more energy than any human-made particle accelerator
can achieve.
Astrophysicists calculated this
theoretical limit, known as the Greisen–Zatsepin–Kuzmin (GZK) cutoff, as the
maximum energy a proton can hold traveling over long distances before the
effect of interactions of the microwave background radiation takes their
energy.
Known source candidates, such
as active galactic nuclei or black holes with accretion disks emitting
particle jets, tend to be more than 160 million light years away from Earth.
The new particle's 2.4 x 1020 eV and the Oh-My-God
particle's 3.2 x 1020 eV easily surpass the cutoff.
Researchers also analyze cosmic ray
composition for clues of its origins. A heavier particle, like iron nuclei, are
heavier, have more charge and are more susceptible to bending in a magnetic
field than a lighter particle made of protons from a hydrogen atom. The new
particle is likely a proton. Particle physics dictates that a cosmic ray with
energy beyond the GZK cutoff is too powerful for the microwave background to
distort its path, but back-tracing its trajectory points towards empty space.
"Maybe magnetic fields are
stronger than we thought, but that disagrees with other observations that show
they're not strong enough to produce significant curvature at these 1020 electron volt energies," said Belz. "It's a real
mystery."
Expanding the footprint
The Telescope Array is uniquely
positioned to detect ultra-high-energy cosmic rays. It sits at about 1,200 m (4,000 ft), the elevation sweet
spot that allows secondary particles maximum development, but before they start
to decay. Its location in Utah's West Desert provides ideal atmospheric
conditions in two ways: the dry air is crucial because humidity will absorb the
ultraviolet light necessary for detection; and the region's dark skies are
essential, as light pollution will create too much noise and obscure the cosmic
rays.
Astrophysicists are still baffled
by the mysterious phenomena. The Telescope Array is in the middle of an
expansion that that they hope will help crack the case. Once completed, 500 new
scintillator detectors will expand the Telescope Array will sample cosmic
ray-induced particle showers across 2,900 km2 (1,100 mi2 ), an area nearly the size of Rhode Island. The larger
footprint will hopefully capture more events that will shed light on what's
going on.
Source: Telescope Array detects second-highest-energy cosmic ray ever (phys.org)
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