Unified model for the gamma-ray emission of supernova remnants
Qiang Yuan (IHEP), Siming Liu (PMO), Xiao-Jun Bi (IHEP)

TL;DR
This paper presents a unified model explaining the gamma-ray emission from supernova remnants by considering variations in environmental density and particle transport effects, supporting their role in cosmic ray production.
Contribution
The paper introduces a comprehensive model that accounts for different gamma-ray spectra of SNRs based on environmental density and particle transport, unifying previous observations.
Findings
Gamma-ray emission varies with medium density, being inverse-Compton or π^0-decay dominated.
Old remnants interacting with molecular clouds likely have hadronic gamma-ray origins.
Intermediate age remnants in low-density environments show leptonic gamma-ray emission.
Abstract
Shocks of supernova remnants (SNRs) are important (and perhaps the dominant) agents for production of the Galactic cosmic rays. Recent -ray observations of several SNRs have made this case more compelling. However, these broadband high-energy measurements also reveal a variety of spectral shape demanding more comprehensive modeling of emissions from SNRs. According to the locally observed fluxes of cosmic ray protons and electrons, the electron-to-proton number ratio is known to be about 1%. Assuming such a ratio is universal for all SNRs and identical spectral shape for all kinds of accelerated particles, we propose a unified model that ascribes the distinct -ray spectra of different SNRs to variations of the medium density and the spectral difference between cosmic ray electrons and protons observed at Earth to transport effects. For low density environments, the…
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