Time-Dependent Escape of Cosmic Rays from Supernova Remnants, and their Interaction with Dense Media
I. Telezhinsky, V. V. Dwarkadas, M. Pohl

TL;DR
This paper investigates how cosmic rays escape from supernova remnants over time, their interaction with dense media, and how different diffusion models affect their spectra and confinement.
Contribution
It introduces a method to trace escaped cosmic rays around SNRs considering time-dependent acceleration and various diffusion assumptions.
Findings
CRs are strongly confined near SNRs
Dilution of CRs occurs as they propagate farther
Spectral evolution depends on diffusion models
Abstract
Context. Supernova remnants (SNRs) are thought to be the main source of Galactic cosmic rays (CRs) up to the "knee" in CR spectrum. During the evolution of a SNR, the bulk of the CRs are confined inside the SNR shell. The highest-energy particles leave the system continuously, while the remaining adiabatically cooled particles are released when the SNR has expanded sufficiently and decelerated so that the magnetic field at the shock is no longer able to confine them. Particles escaping from the parent system may interact with nearby molecular clouds, producing -rays in the process via pion decay. The soft gamma-ray spectra observed for a number of SNRs interacting with molecular clouds, however, challenge current theories of non-linear particle acceleration that predict harder spectra. Aims. We study how the spectrum of escaped particles depends on the time-dependent…
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