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December 2007, to be published in Physical Review D15
Inhomogeneous extragalactic magnetic fields and the second knee in the cosmic
ray spectrum
Various experiments indicate the existence of a second knee around energy $E=3\times 10^{17}$~eV in the cosmic ray spectrum. This feature could be the signature of the end of the galactic component and of the emergence of the extragalactic one, provided that the latter cuts off at low energies. Recent analytical calculations have shown that this cut-off could be a consequence of the existence of extragalactic magnetic fields (Refs.~\cite{L05,AB05}): low energy protons diffuse on extragalactic magnetic fields and cannot reach the observer within a given time. We study the influence of inhomogeneous magnetic fields on the magnetic horizon, using a new semi-analytical propagation code. Our results indicate that, at a fixed value of the volume averaged magnetic field $\langle B\rangle$, the amplitude of the low energy cut-off is mainly controled by the strength of magnetic fields in the voids of the large scale structure distribution. © 2008 The American Physical Society.
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