4,583 research outputs found

    Spectra of accelerated particles at supernova shocks in the presence of neutral hydrogen: the case of Tycho

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    The presence of neutral hydrogen in the shock proximity changes the structure of the shock and affects the spectra of particles accelerated through the first-order Fermi mechanism. This phenomenon has profound implications for the interpretation of the multifrequency spectra of radiation from supernova remnants. Neutrals that undergo charge exchange with hot ions downstream of the shock may result in fast neutrals moving towards the upstream gas, where they can suffer additional charge exchange or ionisation reactions, thereby depositing energy and momentum upstream. Here we discuss the implications of this neutral return flux, which was already predicted in our previous work on neutral mediated supernova shocks, and show how the spectra of accelerated particles turn out to be appreciably steeper than p4p^{-4}, thereby affecting the gamma ray spectra from supernova remnants in general and from Tycho specifically. The theory that describes non-linear diffusive shock acceleration in the presence of neutral hydrogen has been developed in recent years. Here we use a semi-analytical theory developed in previous work and specialise our predictions to the case of the Tycho supernova shock, where there is evidence that the spectrum of the accelerated cosmic rays is steeper than expected from the traditional theory of diffusive shock acceleration. We show that, if the fraction of neutral hydrogen in the vicinity of the Tycho supernova shock is, as suggested by observations, ~70-90, then spectra of accelerated protons steeper than p4p^{-4} may be a natural consequence of charge exchange reactions and the associated neutral return flux. The spectral shape is affected by this phenomenon for particles with energies below ~100-1000 GeV, for which the diffusion length is less than or at most comparable to the pathlength of charge exchange and ionisation upstream of the shock.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication by A&

    Cosmic Rays, Radio Halos and Non-Thermal X-ray Emission in Clusters of Galaxies

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    We calculate the flux of radio, hard X-ray and UV radiation from clusters of galaxies as produced by synchrotron emission and Inverse Compton Scattering of electrons generated as secondaries in cosmic ray interactions in the intracluster medium. Both the spatial distribution of cosmic rays due to their diffusion and the spatial distribution of the intracluster gas are taken into account. Our calculations are specifically applied to the case of the Coma cluster. The fluxes and spectra of the radio halo emission and of the hard X-ray excess from Coma can be explained in this model if an average magnetic field B0.1μGB \sim 0.1\mu G is assumed. However, such a low value for the intracluster magnetic field implies a large cosmic ray energy density which in turn is responsible, through neutral pion decay, for a gamma ray flux above 100 MeV which exceeds the EGRET upper limit. This gamma ray bound can be relaxed if the hard X-ray excess and the radio halo emission from Coma are not due to the same population of electrons. We finally stress the unique role that the new generation gamma ray satellites will play to discriminate among different models for the non thermal emission in clusters of galaxies.Comment: 25 pages, 3 Figures, Latex (using epsfig,elsart), to appear in Astroparticle Physics. Astroparticle Physics, in pres

    Escape of cosmic rays from the Galaxy and effects on the circumgalactic medium

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    The escape of cosmic rays from the Galaxy is expected to shape their spectrum inside the Galaxy. Yet, this phenomenon is very poorly understood and, in the absence of a physical description, it is usually modelled as free escape from a given boundary, typically located at a few kpc distance from the Galactic disc. We show that the assumption of free escape leads to the conclusion that the cosmic ray current propagating in the circumgalactic medium is responsible for a non resonant cosmic ray induced instability that in turn leads to the generation of a magnetic field of strength 2×108\sim 2\times 10^{-8} Gauss on a scale 10\sim 10 kpc around our Galaxy. The self-generated diffusion produces large gradients in the particle pressure that induce a displacement of the intergalactic medium with velocity 10100\sim 10-100 km/s. Cosmic rays are then carried away by advection. If the overdensity of the intergalactic gas in a region of size 10\sim 10 kpc around our Galaxy is 100\gtrsim 100 with respect to the cosmological baryon density Ωbρcr\Omega_{b}\rho_{cr}, then the flux of high energy neutrinos as due to pion production becomes comparable with the flux of astrophysical neutrinos recently measured by IceCube.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Letter

    Small Scale Anisotropies of UHECRs from Super-Heavy Halo Dark Matter

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    The decay of very heavy metastable relics of the Early Universe can produce ultra-high energy cosmic rays (UHECRs) in the halo of our own Galaxy. In this model, no Greisen-Zatsepin-Kuzmin cutoff is expected because of the short propagation distances. We show here that, as a consequence of the hierarchical build up of the halo, this scenario predicts the existence of small scale anisotropies in the arrival directions of UHECRs, in addition to a large scale anisotropy, known from previous studies. We also suggest some other observable consequences of this scenario which will be testable with upcoming experiments, as Auger, EUSO and OWL.Comment: Contribution given at ICRC 2001 - August 7-15, 2001 - Hambur

    On the radial distribution of Galactic cosmic rays

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    The spectrum and morphology of the diffuse Galactic gamma-ray emission carries valuable information on cosmic ray (CR) propagation. Recent results obtained by analyzing Fermi-LAT data accumulated over seven years of observation show a substantial variation of the CR spectrum as a function of the distance from the Galactic Center. The spatial distribution of the CR density in the outer Galaxy appears to be weakly dependent upon the galactocentric distance, as found in previous studies as well, while the density in the central region of the Galaxy was found to exceed the value measured in the outer Galaxy. At the same time, Fermi-LAT data suggest a gradual spectral softening while moving outward from the center of the Galaxy to its outskirts. These findings represent a challenge for standard calculations of CR propagation based on assuming a uniform diffusion coefficient within the Galactic volume. Here we present a model of non-linear CR propagation in which transport is due to particle scattering and advection off self-generated turbulence. We find that for a realistic distribution of CR sources following the spatial distribution of supernova remnants and the space dependence of the magnetic field on galactocentric distance, both the spatial profile of CR density and the spectral softening can easily be accounted for.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publivation to MNRAS letter
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