We investigate the effects of the efficient production of cosmic rays on the
evolution of supernova remnants (SNRs) in the adiabatic Sedov-Taylor phase. We
model the SNR by coupling the hydrodynamic evolution with nonlinear diffusive
shock acceleration (DSA), and track self-consistently the ionization state of
the shock-heated plasma. Using a plasma emissivity code and the results of the
model, we predict the thermal X-ray emission and combine it with the
non-thermal component in order to obtain the complete spectrum in this energy
range. Hence, we study how the interpretation of thermal X-ray observations is
affected by the efficiency of the DSA process, and find that, compared to test
particle cases, the efficient DSA example yields a smaller shock radius and
speed, a larger compression ratio, and lower intensity X-ray thermal emission.
We also find that a model where the shock is not assumed to produce CRs can fit
the X-ray observational properties of an example with efficient particle
acceleration, with a different set of input parameters, and in particular a
much lower explosion energy. Additionally, we model the broadband non-thermal
emission, and investigate what signatures result from the acceleration of
particles.Comment: 8 Pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap