Characterizing Cosmic-Ray Propagation in Massive Star-Forming Regions: The Case of 30 Doradus and the Large Magellanic Cloud
E.J. Murphy, T.A. Porter, I.V. Moskalenko, G. Helou, and A.W. Strong

TL;DR
This study investigates cosmic-ray propagation in the 30 Doradus star-forming region of the Large Magellanic Cloud, revealing energy-dependent propagation lengths and diffusion coefficients consistent with galactic-scale trends.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of cosmic-ray propagation lengths and diffusion coefficients specifically within a massive star-forming region, using multi-wavelength correlation methods.
Findings
CR electron propagation length: 100-140 pc at 3 GeV
CR nuclei propagation length: 200-320 pc at 20 GeV
Diffusion coefficient scaling: (R/GV)^{0.7-0.8}
Abstract
Using infrared, radio, and gamma-ray data,we investigate the propagation characteristics of cosmic-ray (CR) electrons and nuclei in the 30 Doradus (30\,Dor) star-forming region in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) using a phenomenological model based on the radio-far-infrared correlation within galaxies. Employing a correlation analysis, we derive an average propagation length of \sim 100-140 pc for \sim 3 GeV CR electrons resident in 30 Dor from consideration of the radio and infrared data. Assuming that the observed gamma-ray emission towards 30 Dor is associated with the star-forming region, and applying the same methodology to the infrared and gamma-ray data, we estimate a \sim 20 GeV propagation length of 200-320 pc for the CR nuclei. This is approximately twice as large as for\sim 3 GeV CR electrons, corresponding to a spatial diffusion coefficient that is \sim 4 times higher,…
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