Physicists have struggled for decades to explain how and where the particles acquire such stupendous energy, invoking, for example, supermassive black holes at the cores of galaxies. But one theorist now argues that a subtle similarity among the highest energy rays points to a more modest source: the mergers of neutron stars. Proposed in
a paper in press at Physical Review Letters, the idea has piqued the interest of astrophysicists, who now aim to test it.
“I totally agree that a neutron star merger is a promising candidate,” says Toshihiro Fujii, a particle astrophysicist at Osaka Metropolitan University who works with the Telescope Array, a huge cosmic ray detector in Dugway, Utah. Markus Roth, a particle astrophysicist at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology who works on the Pierre Auger Observatory, an even bigger detector in Argentina, says, “I do not see any argument that would contradict [the] proposal.”