scholarly journals The origin of Galactic cosmic rays as revealed by their composition

2021 ◽  
Vol 508 (1) ◽  
pp. 1321-1345
Author(s):  
Vincent Tatischeff ◽  
John C Raymond ◽  
Jean Duprat ◽  
Stefano Gabici ◽  
Sarah Recchia

ABSTRACT Galactic cosmic rays (GCRs) are thought to be accelerated in strong shocks induced by massive star winds and supernova explosions sweeping across the interstellar medium. But the phase of the interstellar medium from which the CRs are extracted has remained elusive until now. Here, we study in detail the GCR source composition deduced from recent measurements by the AMS-02, Voyager 1, and SuperTIGER experiments to obtain information on the composition, ionization state, and dust content of the GCR source reservoirs. We show that the volatile elements of the CR material are mainly accelerated from a plasma of temperature ≳ 2 MK, which is typical of the hot medium found in Galactic superbubbles energized by the activity of massive star winds and supernova explosions. Another GCR component, which is responsible for the overabundance of 22Ne, most likely arises from acceleration of massive star winds in their termination shocks. From the CR-related gamma-ray luminosity of the Milky Way, we estimate that the ion acceleration efficiency in both supernova shocks and wind termination shocks is of the order of 10−5. The GCR source composition also shows evidence for a preferential acceleration of refractory elements contained in interstellar dust. We suggest that the GCR refractories are also produced in superbubbles, from shock acceleration and subsequent sputtering of dust grains continuously incorporated into the hot plasma through thermal evaporation of embedded molecular clouds. Our model explains well the measured abundances of all primary and mostly primary CRs from H to Zr, including the overabundance of 22Ne.

2020 ◽  
Vol 496 (2) ◽  
pp. 2448-2461 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matteo Pais ◽  
Christoph Pfrommer ◽  
Kristian Ehlert ◽  
Maria Werhahn ◽  
Georg Winner

ABSTRACT Galactic cosmic rays (CRs) are believed to be accelerated at supernova remnant (SNR) shocks. In the hadronic scenario, the TeV gamma-ray emission from SNRs originates from decaying pions that are produced in collisions of the interstellar gas and CRs. Using CR-magnetohydrodynamic simulations, we show that magnetic obliquity-dependent shock acceleration is able to reproduce the observed TeV gamma-ray morphology of SNRs such as Vela Jr and SN1006 solely by varying the magnetic morphology. This implies that gamma-ray bright regions result from quasi-parallel shocks (i.e. when the shock propagates at a narrow angle to the upstream magnetic field), which are known to efficiently accelerate CR protons, and that gamma-ray dark regions point to quasi-perpendicular shock configurations. Comparison of the simulated gamma-ray morphology to observations allows us to constrain the magnetic coherence scale λB around Vela Jr and SN1006 to $\lambda _B \simeq 13_{-4.3}^{+13}$ pc and $\lambda _B \gt 200_{-40}^{+50}$ pc, respectively, where the ambient magnetic field of SN1006 is consistent with being largely homogeneous. We find consistent pure hadronic and mixed hadronic-leptonic models that both reproduce the multifrequency spectra from the radio to TeV gamma-rays and match the observed gamma-ray morphology. Finally, to capture the propagation of an SNR shock in a clumpy interstellar medium, we study the interaction of a shock with a dense cloud with numerical simulations and analytics. We construct an analytical gamma-ray model for a core collapse SNR propagating through a structured interstellar medium, and show that the gamma-ray luminosity is only biased by 30 per cent for realistic parameters.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pontus Brandt ◽  
Ralph McNutt ◽  
Elena Provornikova ◽  
James Kinnison ◽  
Carey Lisse ◽  
...  

<p>During its evolution, the Sun and its protective magnetic bubble – the heliosphere - has completed nearly twenty revolutions around the Galactic Core. During this “Solar Journey” it has plowed through widely different interstellar environments that have all shaped the system we live in today. The orders-of-magnitude differences in interstellar properties have had dramatic consequences for the penetration of interstellar material and have affected elemental and isotopic abundances, atmospheric evolution and perhaps even conditions for habitability. As far as we know, only some 60, 000 years ago, the Sun entered what we call the Local Interstellar Cloud (LIC), and in less than 1,900 years the Sun will be entering a very different interstellar environment that will continue to shape its evolution and fate.</p><p>The Interstellar Probe is a pragmatic mission with a possible launch already in the next decade that would explore the heliospheric boundary and how it interacts with the Very Local Interstellar Medium (VLISM) to understand the current state along this Solar Journey and, ultimately understand where our home came from, and where we are going. During its 50-year nominal design life, it would go far beyond where the Voyager missions have gone, out to about 400 astronomical units (au) and likely survive out to 1000 au. Therefore, the Interstellar Probe mission would represent humanity’s first explicit step in to the galaxy and become NASA's boldest step in space exploration.</p><p>When the Voyager missions traversed the heliospheric boundary with their very limited payload it became clear that we are faced with a whole new regime of space physics that is not only decisive for our own heliosphere, but also for understanding the physics of other astrospheres as well. Today we still do not understand the force that is upholding the magnetic shell (the heliosheath) around our heliosphere, or the mechanisms that shield the solar system from galactic cosmic rays, and many other mysteries. Once beyond where the furthest Voyager spacecraft will cease operations (likely at ~170 au), Interstellar Probe would step in to the unknown, traverse the hydrogen wall and the complex magnetic topology at the very edge of the Sun’s sphere of influence, and then directly sample for the first time the interstellar material that has made all of us. There, measurements of the unperturbed gas, plasma, and fields would allow accurate determination of the current state of the LIC and how it affects the global heliosphere. Measurements of unshielded interstellar dust and galactic cosmic rays would provide unprecedented information on stellar and galactic evolution. The physical processes that occur as the solar wind and magnetic field interact with VLISM would also provide the only directly measurable prototypes for understanding the astrospheres surrounding other stars that control the atmospheres and habitability of their exoplanets. All this newly acquired knowledge would then enable an understanding of the current state of the heliosphere and the VLISM, and how they interact, which ultimately can be used to extrapolate the understanding of our system back to the past and into the future.</p><p>At the same time, the outward trajectory is a natural opportunity for exploring one of the ~4,000 Kuiper Belt Objects or ~130 dwarf planets similar to and beyond Pluto and determine the large-scale structure of the circum-solar dust disk to provide the ground truth for planetary system formation in general. Once beyond the obscuring dust, the infrared sky would open a window to early galaxy formation.</p><p>An Interstellar Probe has been discussed and studied since 1960, but the stumbling block has always been propulsion. Now this hurdle has been overcome by the availability of new and larger launch vehicles. An international team of scientists and experts are now in the final year of a NASA-funded study led by The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) to develop pragmatic example mission concepts for Interstellar Probe with a nominal design lifetime of 50 years. Together with the Space Launch System (SLS) Program Office at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center, the team has analyzed dozens of launch configurations and demonstrated that asymptotic speeds in excess of 7.5 au per year can be achieved using existing or near-term propulsion stages with a powered or passive Jupiter Gravity Assist (JGA). These speeds are more than twice that of the fastest escaping man-made spacecraft to date, which is Voyager 1 currently at 3.59 au/year. Launching near the nose direction of the heliosphere, Interstellar Probe would therefore reach the Termination Shock (TS) in less than 12 years and cross the Heliopause into the VLISM after about 16 years from launch.</p><p>In this presentation we provide an overview and update of the study, the science mission concept, the compelling discoveries that await, and the associated example science payload, measurements and operations ensuring a historic data return that would push the boundaries of space exploration by going where no one has gone before.</p><p> </p>


1999 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 106-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fabian Walter

AbstractHigh resolution HI observations of nearby dwarf galaxies (most of which are situated in the M81 group at a distance of about 3·2 Mpc) reveal that their neutral interstellar medium (ISM) is dominated by hole-like features most of which are expanding. A comparison of the physical properties of these holes with the ones found in more massive spiral galaxies (such as M31 and M33) shows that they tend to reach much larger sizes in dwarf galaxies. This can be understood in terms of the galaxy's gravitational potential. The origin of these features is still a matter of debate. In general, young star forming regions (OB-associations) are held responsible for their formation. This picture, however, is not without its critics and other mechanisms such as the infall of high velocity clouds, turbulent motions or even gamma ray bursters have been recently proposed. Here I will present one example of a supergiant shell in IC 2574 which corroborates the picture that OB associations are indeed creating these structures. This particular supergiant shell is currently the most promising case to study the effects of the combined effects of stellar winds and supernova explosions which shape the neutral interstellar medium of (dwarf) galaxies.


2020 ◽  
Vol 905 (1) ◽  
pp. 80
Author(s):  
Akshat Garg ◽  
Kuljeet K. Marhas ◽  
Vikram Goyal

2020 ◽  
Vol 497 (3) ◽  
pp. 3581-3590
Author(s):  
Emma de Oña Wilhelmi ◽  
Iurii Sushch ◽  
Robert Brose ◽  
Enrique Mestre ◽  
Yang Su ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Recent results obtained with gamma-ray satellites have established supernova remnants as accelerators of GeV hadronic cosmic rays. In such processes, CRs accelerated in SNR shocks interact with particles from gas clouds in their surrounding. In particular, the rich medium in which core-collapse SNRs explode provides a large target density to boost hadronic gamma-rays. SNR G39.2–0.3 is one of the brightest SNR in infrared wavelengths, and its broad multiwavelength coverage allows a detailed modelling of its radiation from radio to high energies. We reanalysed the Fermi-LAT data on this region and compare it with new radio observations from the MWISP survey. The modelling of the spectral energy distribution from radio to GeV energies favours a hadronic origin of the gamma-ray emission and constrains the SNR magnetic field to be at least ∼100 µG. Despite the large magnetic field, the present acceleration of protons seems to be limited to ∼10 GeV, which points to a drastic slow down of the shock velocity due to the dense wall traced by the CO observations, surrounding the remnant. Further investigation of the gamma-ray spectral shape points to a dynamically old remnant subjected to severe escape of CRs and a decrease of acceleration efficiency. The low-energy peak of the gamma-ray spectrum also suggests that that the composition of accelerated particles might be enriched by heavy nuclei which is certainly expected for a core-collapse SNR. Alternatively, the contribution of the compressed pre-existing Galactic cosmic rays is discussed, which is, however, found to not likely be the dominant process for gamma-ray production.


1991 ◽  
Vol 126 ◽  
pp. 433-436
Author(s):  
Kunitomo Sakurai

AbstractThe chemical composition of galactic cosmic rays in their sources is similar to that of interstellar clouds or grains which are relatively enriched in refractory and siderophile elements as compared with the chemical composition of the solar atmosphere. Taking into account this fact, it is shown that the cosmic ray source matter can be identified as the dust or grains observed in the envelopes of red supergiant stars or the matter originally ejected from supernova explosions.


2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (S296) ◽  
pp. 378-379 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hui Zhu ◽  
Wenwu Tian

AbstractSupernova remnants (SNRs) play a key role in understanding supernovae explosion mechanisms, exploring the likely sources of Galactic cosmic rays and the chemical enrichment of interstellar medium (ISM). Reliable distance determinations to Galactic SNRs are key to obtain their basic parameters, such as size, age, explosion energy, which helps us to study their environment and interstellar medium. We review the methods to determine the distances to SNRs and highlight the kinematic distance measurement by Hi absorption and CO emission observations.


2002 ◽  
Vol 20 (8) ◽  
pp. 1247-1252 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Struminsky

Abstract. Strong interplanetary disturbances may affect cosmic ray protons tremendously with energies less than 1 GeV, increasing their intensity by hundreds of percents, but they are not so effective for protons of higher energies. This energy limit is crucial to understand processes of cosmic ray propagation and acceleration in the heliosphere. The Forbush pre-increase and the effect of shock-associated particles observed on 20 October 1989 illustrate the problem. This is a rare event, when the energies of shock-associated particles measured by the GOES-7 satellite spread continuously to the neutron monitor energies. The Forbush pre-increase could be attributed to a single reflection of galactic cosmic rays from the magnetic wall observed at 12:00 UT. It had a very hard spectrum with maximum energy of modulation more than 10 GeV. The spectrum of shock-associated particles was soft and their maximum energy was less than 1 GeV. The problem of shock acceleration versus trapping is discussed for the 20 October 1989 event. It is argued that the shock-associated particles were accelerated near the flare site and then propagated to the Earth inside the trap between two magnetic walls at 12:00 UT and 17:00 UT.Key words. Interplanetary physics (cosmic rays; energetic particles; interplanetary magnetic fields)


2009 ◽  
Vol 5 (S268) ◽  
pp. 473-482
Author(s):  
Nikos Prantzos

AbstractA short overview is presented of current issues concerning the production and evolution of Li, Be and B in the Milky Way. In particular, the observed “primary-like” evolution of Be is re-assessed in the light of a novel idea: it is argued that Galactic Cosmic Rays are accelerated from the wind material of rotating massive stars, hit by the forward shock of the subsequent supernova explosions. The pre-galactic levels of both Li isotopes remain controversial at present, making it difficult to predict their Galactic evolution. A quantitative estimate is provided of the contributions of various candidate sources to the solar abundance of Li.


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