Turbulence and Particle Acceleration in Giant Radio Halos: the Origin of Seed Electrons
Anders Pinzke, S. Peng Oh, Christoph Pfrommer

TL;DR
This paper investigates the origin of seed electrons in giant radio halos, proposing three realistic scenarios involving turbulence, cosmic ray streaming, and enhanced acceleration efficiency to explain observed flat radio emissions.
Contribution
It introduces three novel scenarios for seed electron origins in radio halos, integrating cosmic ray physics with cosmological simulations to match observations.
Findings
Turbulent energy ratio increases with radius, producing flat radio profiles.
CR protons can stream outward, creating a flat distribution of seed electrons.
Enhanced electron acceleration efficiency leads to primary electrons dominating radio emission.
Abstract
About 1/3 of X-ray-luminous clusters show smooth, unpolarized radio emission on ~Mpc scales, known as giant radio halos. One promising model for radio halos is Fermi-II acceleration of seed relativistic electrons by turbulence of the intracluster medium (ICM); Coulomb losses prohibit acceleration from the thermal pool. However, the origin of seed electrons has never been fully explored. Here, we integrate the Fokker-Planck equation of the cosmic ray (CR) electron and proton distributions in a cosmological simulations of cluster formation. For standard assumptions, structure formation shocks lead to a seed electron population which produces too centrally concentrated radio emission. Instead, we present three realistic scenarios that each can reproduce the spatially flat radio emission observed in the Coma cluster: (1) the ratio of injected turbulent energy density to thermal energy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
