Page 2: Research news on Ultra-high-energy cosmic radiation

Ultra-high-energy cosmic radiation as a research area investigates cosmic rays with energies typically above 10¹⁸ eV, focusing on their origins, acceleration mechanisms, propagation through intergalactic and galactic magnetic fields, and interactions with cosmic microwave background photons (e.g., Greisen–Zatsepin–Kuzmin suppression). The field integrates astroparticle physics, high-energy astrophysics, and cosmology, using extensive air-shower observatories, fluorescence telescopes, and surface detector arrays to measure energy spectra, arrival directions, and mass composition. Research addresses candidate sources such as active galactic nuclei or gamma-ray bursts, tests hadronic interaction models at energies beyond terrestrial accelerators, and constrains fundamental physics, including Lorentz invariance and particle cross-sections at extreme energies.

Cosmic rays' vast energy traced to magnetic turbulence

Ultra-high energy cosmic rays, which emerge in extreme astrophysical environments—like the roiling environments near black holes and neutron stars—have far more energy than the energetic particles that emerge from our sun. ...

Record gamma rays detected at Milky Way's core

At the High-Altitude Water Cherenkov (HAWC) observatory, 13,000 feet above sea level on the Sierra Negra volcano of Mexico, researchers are getting a look into a violent mystery in the Milky Way galaxy. An international research ...

Quantum challenge to be solved one mile underground

Radiation from space is a challenge for quantum computers as their computation time becomes limited by cosmic rays. Researchers from Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, and University of Waterloo in Canada are now ...

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