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We study general implications of the IceCube observations in the energy range from $10^{6}$ GeV to $10^{10}$ GeV for the origin of extragalactic ultrahigh energy cosmic rays assuming that high energy neutrinos are generated by the photomeson production of protons in the extragalactic universe. The PeV-energy neutrino flux observed by IceCube gives strong bounds on the photomeson-production optical depth of protons in their sources and the intensity of the proton component of extragalactic cosmic rays. The neutrino flux implies that extragalactic cosmic-ray sources should have the optical depth greater than $sim 0.01$ and contribute to more than a few percent of the observed bulk of cosmic rays at 10 PeV. If the spectrum of cosmic rays from these extragalactic sources extends well beyond 1 EeV, the neutrino flux indicates that extragalactic cosmic rays are dominant in the observed total cosmic-ray flux at 1 EeV and above, favoring the dip transition model of cosmic rays. The cosmic-ray sources are also required to be efficient neutrino emitters with the optical depth close to unity in this case. The highest energy cosmic-ray ($sim 10^{11}$ GeV) sources should not be strongly evolved with redshift to account for the IceCube observations, suggesting that any cosmic-ray radiation scenarios involving distant powerful astronomical objects with strong cosmological evolution are strongly disfavored. These considerations conclude that none of the known extragalactic astronomical objects can be simultaneously a source of both PeV and trans-EeV energy cosmic rays. We also discuss a possible effect of cosmic-ray propagation in magnetized intergalactic space to the connection between the observed total cosmic-ray flux and neutrino flux.
In this paper we review the extragalactic propagation of ultrahigh energy cosmic-rays (UHECR). We present the different energy loss processes of protons and nuclei, and their expected influence on energy evolution of the UHECR spectrum and compositio
This is a review of the most resent results from the investigation of the Ultrahigh Energy Cosmic Rays, particles of energy exceeding 10$^{18}$ eV. After a general introduction to the topic and a brief review of the lower energy cosmic rays and the d
We explain the observed multiwavelength photon spectrum of a number of BL Lac objects detected at very high energy (VHE, $E gtrsim 30$ GeV), using a lepto-hadronic emission model. The one-zone leptonic emission is employed to fit the synchrotron peak
GeV-TeV gamma-ray and PeV-EeV neutrino backgrounds provide a unique window on the nature of the ultra-high-energy cosmic-rays (UHECRs). We discuss the implications of the recent Fermi-LAT data regarding the extragalactic gamma-ray background (EGB) an
Papers on cosmic rays submitted to the 33nd International Cosmic Ray Conference (Rio de Janeiro 2013) by the IceCube Collaboration.