Acceleration of cosmic rays by young core-collapse supernova remnants
I. Telezhinsky, V.V. Dwarkadas, M. Pohl

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that complex plasma flows and reverse shock effects in young core-collapse supernova remnants significantly influence cosmic-ray spectra and emissions, challenging traditional uniform environment models.
Contribution
The study introduces high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations with magnetic field advection to model cosmic-ray acceleration in complex SNR environments, highlighting the importance of reverse shocks.
Findings
Complex plasma flows modify particle spectra.
Reverse shocks significantly impact emission spectra.
Magnetic field advection is crucial for accurate modeling.
Abstract
Context. Supernova remnants (SNRs) are thought to be the primary candidates for the sources of Galactic cosmic rays. According to the diffusive shock acceleration theory, SNR shocks produce a power-law spectrum with an index of s = 2, perhaps nonlinearly modified to harder spectra at high energy. Observations of SNRs often indicate particle spectra that are softer than that and show features not expected from classical theory. Known drawbacks of the standard approach are the assumption that SNRs evolve in a uniform environment, and that the reverse shock does not accelerate particles. Relaxing these assumptions increases the complexity of the problem, because one needs reliable hydrodynamical data for the plasma flow as well as good estimates for the magnetic field (MF) at the reverse shock. Aims. We show that these two factors are especially important when modeling young core-collapse…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Neutrino Physics Research
