Strong evidences of hadron acceleration in Tycho's Supernova Remnant
G. Morlino, D. Caprioli

TL;DR
Recent gamma-ray observations of Tycho's supernova remnant provide strong evidence that it efficiently accelerates protons to very high energies, supporting hadronic models of cosmic ray origin.
Contribution
This study presents a semi-analytical model of particle acceleration in Tycho's SNR, demonstrating efficient proton acceleration and magnetic field amplification consistent with observations.
Findings
Protons are accelerated up to at least 500 TeV.
Magnetic fields are amplified to ~300 micro Gauss.
Gamma-ray emission is explained by hadronic processes.
Abstract
Very recent gamma-ray observations of G120.1+1.4 (Tycho's) supernova remnant (SNR) by Fermi-LAT and VERITAS provided new fundamental pieces of information for understanding particle acceleration and non-thermal emission in SNRs. We want to outline a coherent description of Tycho's properties in terms of SNR evolution, shock hydrodynamics and multi-wavelength emission by accounting for particle acceleration at the forward shock via first order Fermi mechanism. We adopt here a quick and reliable semi-analytical approach to non-linear diffusive shock acceleration which includes magnetic field amplification due to resonant streaming instability and the dynamical backreaction on the shock of both cosmic rays (CRs) and self-generated magnetic turbulence. We find that Tycho's forward shock is accelerating protons up to at least 500 TeV, channelling into CRs about the 10 per cent of its kinetic…
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