
TL;DR
This paper reviews the current understanding of the origin of galactic cosmic rays, highlighting successes and discrepancies in the supernova remnant paradigm, and discusses recent observational challenges to existing models.
Contribution
It critically examines the SNR paradigm for cosmic ray origin, emphasizing recent observational tensions and proposing implications for future models.
Findings
Gamma ray and X-ray observations support SNR acceleration.
Spectral discrepancies challenge existing acceleration models.
Flux measurements indicate spectral breaks at 200 GV.
Abstract
The origin of the bulk of cosmic rays (CRs) observed at Earth is the topic of a century long investigation, paved with successes and failures. From the energetic point of view, supernova remnants (SNRs) remain the most plausible sources of CRs up to rigidity ? 10^6-10^7 GV. This confidence somehow resulted in the construction of a paradigm, the so-called SNR paradigm: CRs are accelerated through diffusive shock acceleration in SNRs and propagate diffusively in the Galaxy in an energy dependent way. Qualitative confirmation of the SNR acceleration scenario has recently been provided by gamma ray and X-ray observations. Diffusive propagation in the Galaxy is probed observationally through measurement of the secondary to primary nuclei flux ratios (such as B/C). There are however some weak points in the paradigm, which suggest that we are probably missing some physical ingredients in our…
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