The origin of these rare highest energy cosmic rays is not known. Since observations find no correlation with the Galactic plane and Galactic magnetic fields are not strong enough to accelerate particles to these energies, these cosmic rays are believed to have extra-galactic origin.
Neutron stars One suggested source of UHECR particles is their origination from
neutron stars. In young neutron stars with spin periods of under 10 ms, the
magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) forces from the quasi-neutral fluid of superconducting protons and electrons existing in a neutron
superfluid accelerate iron nuclei to UHECR velocities. The neutron superfluid in rapidly rotating stars creates a magnetic field of 108 to 1011 teslas, at which point the neutron star is classified as a
magnetar. This magnetic field is the strongest stable field in the observed universe and creates the relativistic MHD wind believed to accelerate iron nuclei remaining from the supernova to the necessary energy. Another hypothesized source of UHECRs from neutron stars is during neutron star to
strange star combustion. This hypothesis relies on the assumption that
strange matter is the
ground state of matter, but has no experimental or observational data to support it. Due to the immense gravitational pressures from the neutron star, it is believed that small pockets of matter consisting of
up,
down, and
strange quarks in equilibrium acting as a single hadron (as opposed to a number of
baryons). This will then combust the entire star to strange matter, at which point the neutron star becomes a strange star and its magnetic field breaks down, which occurs because the protons and neutrons in the quasi-neutral fluid have become
strangelets. This magnetic field breakdown releases large amplitude electromagnetic waves (LAEMWs). The LAEMWs accelerate light ion remnants from the supernova to UHECR energies. "Ultra-high-energy cosmic ray
electrons" (defined as
electrons with energies of ≥1014
eV) might be explained by the
Centrifugal mechanism of acceleration in the magnetospheres of the
Crab-like
pulsars. The feasibility of electron acceleration to this energy scale in the
Crab Pulsar magnetosphere is supported by the 2019 observation of
ultra-high-energy gamma rays coming from the
Crab Nebula, a young pulsar with a spin period of 33 ms.
Active galactic cores Interactions with
blue-shifted cosmic microwave background radiation limit the distance that these particles can travel before losing energy; this is known as the
Greisen–Zatsepin–Kuzmin limit or GZK limit. The source of such high energy particles has been a mystery for many years. Recent results from the Pierre Auger Observatory show that ultra-high-energy cosmic ray arrival directions appear to be correlated with extragalactic supermassive black holes at the center of nearby galaxies called
active galactic nuclei (AGN). However, since the angular correlation scale used is fairly large (3.1°) these results do not unambiguously identify the origins of such cosmic ray particles. The AGN could merely be closely associated with the actual sources, for example in galaxies or other astrophysical objects that are clumped with matter on large scales within 100
megaparsecs. Some of the
supermassive black holes in AGN are known to be rotating, as in the
Seyfert galaxy MCG 6-30-15 with time-variability in their inner accretion disks. Black hole spin is a potentially effective agent to drive UHECR production, provided ions are suitably launched to circumvent limiting factors deep within the galactic nucleus, notably curvature radiation and inelastic scattering with radiation from the inner disk. Low-luminosity, intermittent Seyfert galaxies may meet the requirements with the formation of a linear accelerator several light years away from the nucleus, yet within their extended ion tori whose UV radiation ensures a supply of ionic contaminants. The corresponding electric fields are small, on the order of 10 V/cm, whereby the observed UHECRs are indicative for the astronomical size of the source. Improved statistics by the Pierre Auger Observatory will be instrumental in identifying the presently tentative association of UHECRs (from the Local Universe) with Seyferts and
LINERs.
Other possible sources of the particles In addition to neutron stars and active galactic nuclei, the best candidate sources of the UHECR are: • relativistic
supernovae
Relation with dark matter It is hypothesized that active galactic nuclei are capable of converting dark matter into high energy protons. Yuri Pavlov and Andrey Grib at the Alexander Friedmann Laboratory for Theoretical Physics in Saint Petersburg hypothesize that dark matter particles are about 15 times heavier than protons, and that they can decay into pairs of heavier virtual particles of a type that interacts with ordinary matter. Near an active galactic nucleus, one of these particles can fall into the black hole, while the other escapes, as described by the
Penrose process. Some of those particles will collide with incoming particles; these are very high energy collisions which, according to Pavlov, can form ordinary visible protons with very high energy. Pavlov then claims that evidence of such processes are ultra-high-energy cosmic ray particles. == Propagation ==