Ultraheavy nuclei may explain Amaterasu particle origin

New research suggests the Amaterasu particle, one of the most energetic cosmic rays detected, could be an ultraheavy atomic nucleus rather than a proton. The findings, from scientists at Penn State, were published in Physical Review Letters. They indicate such nuclei could retain extreme energy over vast distances in space.

The Amaterasu particle was detected in 2021 by the Telescope Array in Utah with an energy of about 240 exa-electron volts. Its arrival direction points to a cosmic void, leaving its origin unclear. Researchers modeled how different particles travel through intergalactic space and found that nuclei heavier than iron lose energy more slowly than protons. Our research showed that at energies comparable to that of the Amaterasu particle, ultraheavy nuclei lose energy more slowly than protons or intermediate-mass nuclei, said Kohta Murase, the lead researcher from Penn State. Possible sources include massive star collapses into black holes or mergers of neutron stars. Future observatories could test for signatures of these ultraheavy particles in cosmic ray data.

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Physicists at the University of Massachusetts Amherst propose that a record-breaking neutrino detected in 2023 originated from the explosion of a primordial black hole carrying a 'dark charge.' The particle's energy, 100,000 times greater than that produced by the Large Hadron Collider, puzzled scientists since only the KM3NeT experiment recorded it. Their model, published in Physical Review Letters, could also hint at the nature of dark matter.

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Researchers using the DAMPE space telescope have identified a shared spectral softening in cosmic rays across multiple particle types. The pattern appears at a rigidity of about 15 teraelectron-volts for protons through iron nuclei. This finding, published in Nature, offers new insight into how these high-energy particles behave in the galaxy.

Researchers at Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf have filmed copper atoms losing and regaining electrons in femtoseconds using dual lasers. The experiment creates superheated plasma mimicking extreme cosmic conditions. Findings could advance laser fusion research.

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Researchers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory have used a plasma flow reactor to recreate conditions inside a nuclear fireball. Their experiments show that cooling rates and thermal history significantly influence how radioactive particles form, particularly for volatile elements like cesium.

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