109 research outputs found

    Radio-to-TeV γ -ray emission from PSRB1259-63

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    We discuss theimplications of therecent X-ray and TeV γ-ray observations of thePSRB1259-63 system (a young rotation powered pulsar orbiting a Be star) for thetheoretical models of interaction of pulsar and stellar winds. We show that previously considered models have problems to account for the observed behaviour of thesystem. We develop amodel in which thebroad band emission from thebinary system is produced in result of collisions of GeV-TeV energy protons accelerated by thepulsar wind and interacting with thestellar disk. In this model thehigh energy γ-rays are produced in thedecays of secondary neutral pions, while radio and X-ray emission are synchrotron and inverse Compton emission produced by low-energy (≤100MeV) electrons from thedecays of secondary charged π ± mesons. This model can explain not only theobserved energy spectra, but also thecorrelations between TeV, X-ray and radio emission component

    Neutrinos from Extra-Large Hadron Collider in the Milky Way

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    Neutrino telescope IceCube has recently discovered astrophysical neutrinos with energies in the TeV-PeV range. We use the data of Fermi gamma-ray telescope to demonstrate that the neutrino signal has significant contribution from the Milky Way galaxy. Matching the gamma-ray and neutrino spectra we find that TeV-PeV Galactic cosmic rays form a powerlaw spectrum with the slope p~2.45. This spectral slope is consistent with the average cosmic ray spectrum in the disks of the Milky Way and Large Magellanic Cloud galaxies. It is also consistent with the theoretical model of cosmic ray injection by diffusive shock acceleration followed by escape through the Galactic magnetic field with Kolmogorov turbulence. The locally observed TeV-PeV cosmic ray proton spectrum is softer than the average Galactic cosmic ray spectrum. This could be readily explained by variability of injection of cosmic rays in the local interstellar medium over the past 1e7 yr and discreetness of the cosmic ray source distribution.Comment: 6 pages 3 figures, accepted to Astroparticle Physic

    Kaluza-Klein Theories and the Anomalous Magnetic Moment of the Muon

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    We discuss nonminimal couplings of fermions to the electromagnetic field, which generically appear in models with extra dimensions. We consider models where the electromagnetic field is generated by the Kaluza-Klein mechanism. The nonminimal couplings contribute at tree-level to anomalous magnetic and electric dipole moments of fermions. We use recent measurements of these quantities to put limits on the parameters of models with extra dimensions

    A compact pulsar wind nebula model of the γ-ray-loud binary LS I +61○303

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    We study a model of LS I +61°303 in which its radio to TeV emission is due to interaction of a relativistic wind from a young pulsar with the wind from its companion Be star. The detailed structure of the stellar wind plays a critical role in explaining the properties of the system. We assume the fast polar wind is clumpy, which is typical for radiatively driven winds. The clumpiness and some plasma instabilities cause the two winds to mix. The relativistic electrons from the pulsar wind are retained in the moving clumps by inhomogeneities of the magnetic field, which explains the X-ray variability observed on time-scales much shorter than the orbital period. We calculate detailed inhomogeneous spectral models reproducing the average broad-band spectrum from radio to TeV. Given the uncertainties on the magnetic field within the wind and the form of the distribution of relativistic electrons, the X-ray spectrum could be dominated by either Compton or synchrotron emission. The recent Fermi observations constrain the high-energy cut-off in the electron distribution to be at the Lorentz factor of 2 × 104 or ∼108 in the former and latter model, respectively. We provide formulae comparing the losses of the relativistic electrons due to Compton, synchrotron and Coulomb processes versus the distance from the Be star. We calculate the optical depth of the wind to free-free absorption, showing that it will suppress most of the radio emission within the orbit, including the pulsed signal of the rotating neutron star. We point out the importance of Compton and Coulomb heating of the stellar wind within and around the γ-ray emitting region. Then, we find the most likely mechanism explaining the orbital modulation at TeV energies is anisotropy of emission, with relativistic electrons accelerated along the surface of equal ram pressure of the two winds. Pair absorption of the TeV emission suppresses one of the two maxima expected in an orbi

    Cosmological magnetic fields: their generation, evolution and observation

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    We review the possible mechanisms for the generation of cosmological magnetic fields, discuss their evolution in an expanding Universe filled with the cosmic plasma and provide a critical review of the literature on the subject. We put special emphasis on the prospects for observational tests of the proposed cosmological magnetogenesis scenarios using radio and gamma-ray astronomy and ultra-high-energy cosmic rays. We argue that primordial magnetic fields are observationally testable. They lead to magnetic fields in the intergalactic medium with magnetic field strength and correlation length in a well defined range. We also state the unsolved questions in this fascinating open problem of cosmology and propose future observations to address the
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