The mass composition of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays (UHECRs) is usually inferred from the depth of the shower maximum (Xmax) of cosmic-ray showers, which is only ambiguously determined by modern hadronic interaction models. We present a data-driven interpretation of UHECRs, the heavy-metal scenario, which assumes pure iron nuclei above 10^19. 6 eV (≈40 EeV) as the heaviest observed mass composition and introduces a global shift in the Xmax scale predicted by the two hadronic interaction models QGSJet II-04 and Sibyll 2. 3d. We investigate the consequences of the proposed mass-composition model based on the obtained shifts in the Xmax values, which naturally lead to a heavier mass composition of UHECRs than conventionally assumed. We explore the consequences of our model on the energy evolution of relative fractions of primary species, consequently decomposed energy spectrum, hadronic-interaction studies and the arrival directions of UHECRs. We show that within this scenario, presented recently in ApJL 986 L34, the cosmic-ray measurements can be interpreted in a more consistent way.
Vicha et al. (Wed,) studied this question.