Acceleration of cosmic rays and gamma-ray emission from supernova remnants in the Galaxy
P. Cristofari, S. Gabici, S. Casanova, R. Terrier, E. Parizot

TL;DR
This study uses a population approach to assess whether supernova remnants are the primary sources of galactic cosmic rays by predicting their gamma-ray emissions and comparing with observations, supporting the supernova remnant paradigm.
Contribution
It introduces a population-based method to evaluate supernova remnants as cosmic ray sources, providing consistency checks with gamma-ray observations and insights into particle spectra.
Findings
Predicted supernova remnant gamma-ray counts align with observations.
Hints of steeper particle spectra than E^-2 at remnants.
Many remnants likely exhibit hadronic gamma-ray emission.
Abstract
Galactic cosmic rays are believed to be accelerated at supernova remnant shocks. Though very popular and robust, this conjecture still needs a conclusive proof. The strongest support to this idea is probably the fact that supernova remnants are observed in gamma-rays, which are indeed expected as the result of the hadronic interactions between the cosmic rays accelerated at the shock and the ambient gas. However, also leptonic processes can, in most cases, explain the observed gamma-ray emission. This implies that the detections in gamma rays do not necessarily mean that supernova remnants accelerate cosmic ray protons. To overcome this degeneracy, the multi-wavelength emission (from radio to gamma rays) from individual supernova remnants has been studied and in a few cases it has been possible to ascribe the gamma-ray emission to one of the two processes (hadronic or leptonic). Here we…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
