The Fermi Bubble as a Source of Cosmic Rays in the Energy Range > 10E15 eV
K. S. Cheng (1), D. O. Chernyshov (1, 2, 3), V. A. Dogiel (1 and, 2, 3), C. M. Ko (1, 3), W. H. Ip (3), Y. Wang (1) ((1) Department of, Physics, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China, (2) I.E. Tamm Theoretical, Physics Division of P.N. Lebedev Institute of Physics, Moscow

TL;DR
This paper proposes that the Fermi Bubbles, formed by periodic star capture events near the Galactic center, re-accelerate cosmic rays beyond the knee energy, explaining observed cosmic ray spectra and flux.
Contribution
It introduces a model where the Fermi Bubbles re-accelerate cosmic rays via stochastic processes, accounting for spectral features beyond the knee.
Findings
Re-acceleration in the Fermi Bubbles explains cosmic rays beyond the knee.
The model reproduces observed CR spectral indices and flux.
Conversion efficiency from shock energy to CR energy is about 10%.
Abstract
The {\it Fermi} Large Area Telescope has recently discovered two giant gamma-ray bubbles which extend north and south of the Galactic center with diameters and heights of the order of kpc. We suggest that the periodic star capture processes by the Galactic supermassive black hole Sgr A, with a capture rate of yr and an energy release of erg per capture, can result in hot plasma injecting into the Galactic halo at a wind velocity of cm s. The periodic injection of hot plasma can produce a series of shocks. Energetic protons in the bubble are re-accelerated when they interact with these shocks. We show that for energy larger than eV, the acceleration process can be better described by the stochastic second-order Fermi acceleration. We propose that hadronic cosmic rays…
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