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The flux of Ultra High Energy Cosmic Rays (UHECRs) at $E>10^{18.5}$ eV is believed to arise in plasma shock environments in extragalactic sources. In this paper, we present a systematic study of particle acceleration by relativistic shocks, in particular concerning the dependence on bulk Lorentz factor and the angle between the magnetic field and the shockflow. For the first time, simulation results of super- and subluminal shocks with boost factors up to $Gamma=1000$ are investigated and compared systematically. While superluminal shocks are shown to be inefficient at the highest energies ($E>10^{18.5}$ eV), subluminal shocks may provide particles up to $10^{21}$ eV, limited only by the Hillas-criterion. For the subluminal case, we find that mildly relativistic shocks, thought to occur in jets of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN, $Gammasim 10-30$) yield energy spectra of $dN/dEsim E^{-2}$. Highly relativistic shocks expected in Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs, $100<Gamma<1000$), on the other hand, have spectra as flat as $E^{-1.5}$. The model results are compared to the measured flux of Cosmic Rays at the highest energies and it is shown that, while AGN spectra are well-suited, GRB spectra are too flat to explain the observed flux. The first evidence of a correlation between the Cosmic Ray flux above $5.7cdot 10^{10}$ GeV and the distribution of AGN by Auger are explained by the model. Neutrino production is expected in GRBs, either in mildly or highly relativistic shocks and although these sources are excluded as the principle origin of UHECRs, superluminal shocks in particular may be observable via neutrino and photon fluxes, rather than as protons.
We discuss the basic difficulties in understanding the origin of the highest energy particles in the Universe - the ultrahigh energy cosmic rays (UHECR). It is difficult to imagine the sources they are accelerated in. Because of the strong attenuatio
The maximum energy to which cosmic rays can be accelerated at weakly-magnetised ultra-relativistic shocks is investigated. We demonstrate that for such shocks, in which the scattering of energetic particles is mediated exclusively by ion skin-depth s
While there is some level of consensus on a Galactic origin of cosmic rays up to the knee ($E_{k}sim 3times 10^{15}$ eV) and on an extragalactic origin of cosmic rays with energy above $sim 10^{19}$ eV, the debate on the genesis of cosmic rays in the
We study the production of cosmogenic neutrinos and photons during the extragalactic propagation of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays (UHECRs). For a wide range of models in cosmological evolution of source luminosity, composition and maximum energy we c
The origin of the ultra high energy cosmic rays (UHECR) with energies above E > 1017eV, is still unknown. The discovery of their sources will reveal the engines of the most energetic astrophysical accelerators in the universe. This is a written versi