Cosmic ray induced ionisation of a molecular cloud shocked by the W28 supernova remnant
Solenn Vaupr\'e, Pierre Hily-Blant, Cecilia Ceccarelli, Guillaume, Dubus, Stefano Gabici, Thierry Montmerle

TL;DR
This study measures cosmic ray ionisation rates in molecular clouds near the W28 supernova remnant, revealing elevated ionisation levels close to the remnant and supporting a hadronic origin for observed gamma rays, with implications for cosmic ray diffusion.
Contribution
It introduces a new method combining millimetre line observations and chemical modeling to measure cosmic ray ionisation rates near supernova remnants, highlighting spatial variations and supporting hadronic gamma-ray origins.
Findings
Higher ionisation rates ($g100$) near the remnant
Standard ionisation rate at larger distances
Supports hadronic origin of gamma rays
Abstract
Cosmic rays are an essential ingredient in the evolution of the interstellar medium, as they dominate the ionisation of the dense molecular gas, where stars and planets form. However, since they are efficiently scattered by the galactic magnetic fields, many questions remain open, such as where exactly they are accelerated, what is their original energy spectrum, and how they propagate into molecular clouds. In this work we present new observations and discuss in detail a method that allows us to measure the cosmic ray ionisation rate towards the molecular clouds close to the W28 supernova remnant. To perform these measurements, we use CO, HCO, and DCO millimetre line observations and compare them with the predictions of radiative transfer and chemical models away from thermodynamical equilibrium. The CO observations allow us to constrain the density, temperature, and column…
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.
