Particle acceleration and non-thermal emission during the V407 Cygni nova outburst
Pierrick Martin, Guillaume Dubus

TL;DR
This study models particle acceleration and non-thermal emission during the V407 Cygni nova outburst, revealing leptonic gamma-ray origins and energy limits for accelerated particles, with implications for cosmic ray sources.
Contribution
Developed a comprehensive model for diffusive shock acceleration and non-thermal emission in V407 Cyg, considering both leptonic and hadronic processes, and analyzed the system's particle acceleration properties.
Findings
Gamma-ray emission is mainly leptonic, from inverse-Compton scattering.
Protons reach energies up to ~300 GeV, electrons up to ~20 GeV.
Nova contributes minimally to Galactic cosmic rays and is unlikely a TeV source.
Abstract
On March 2010, the symbiotic binary V407 Cyg erupted as a result of a nova explosion. The event gave rise to a two-week long burst of >100MeV gamma-rays detected by Fermi/LAT, a unique observation testifying to particle acceleration in the system. The outburst can be considered a scaled-down supernova, with short dynamical time scale, and thus can constitute a test case for theories of the origin of galactic cosmic rays. We aim at determining the properties of the accelerated particles and identifying the origin of the high-energy radiation. We developed a model for diffusive shock acceleration and non-thermal emission in V407 Cyg, complemented by an evaluation of the thermal emission from the shocked plasma. We considered both leptonic and hadronic contributions to the non-thermal processes, and investigated the effect of many binary and nova parameters. The gamma-ray emission is…
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