On the cosmic ray spectrum from type II Supernovae expanding in their red giant presupernova wind
Martina Cardillo, Elena Amato, Pasquale Blasi

TL;DR
This paper explores how type II supernovae expanding in red supergiant winds can accelerate protons to PeV energies, potentially explaining the cosmic ray knee, but recent data complicates this picture.
Contribution
It introduces a model of particle acceleration in type II supernova remnants that predicts a spectral break and PeV proton energies, aligning with the cosmic ray knee.
Findings
Protons can reach PeV energies in type II SNRs with typical parameters.
The model predicts a spectral break at the maximum energy during the transition phase.
Recent measurements challenge the model's ability to explain all data sets.
Abstract
While from the energetic point of view SNRs are viable sources of Galactic CRs, the issue of whether they can accelerate protons up to PeV remains unsolved. Here we discuss particle acceleration at the forward shock of SN and discuss the possibility that the escaping particle current may excite a non-resonant instability that in turn leads to the formation of resonant modes confining particles close to the shock and increasing the maximum energy. This mechanism works throughout the expansion of the SN explosion, from the ejecta dominated (ED) to the Sedov-Taylor (ST) phase. Because of their higher explosion rate,we focus on type II SNae expanding in the slow, dense red supergiant wind. When the explosion occurs in such winds, the transition between the ED and the ST phase is likely to take place within a few tens of years. As a result, the spectrum of accelerated particles shows a break…
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