Probing Efficient Cosmic-Ray Acceleration in Young Supernovae
Vikram V. Dwarkadas (University of Chicago), M. Renaud, A. Marcowith, (Universite Montpellier II/CNRS), V. Tatischeff (CNRS / Univ Paris-Sud)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how young supernovae accelerate cosmic rays, amplify magnetic fields, and produce gamma-ray and neutrino signals, highlighting the potential for CTA detection and the conditions for PeV particle energies.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of particle acceleration and magnetic field amplification in supernova shocks, with specific predictions for gamma-ray and neutrino emissions from Type IIb supernovae.
Findings
Magnetic fields can be amplified to match radio observations.
Maximum particle energies can reach or exceed 1 PeV.
CTA can detect gamma-ray signals from supernovae like SN 1993J.
Abstract
The formation of a core collapse supernovae (SNe) results in a fast (but non- or mildly-relativistic) shock wave expanding outwards into the surrounding medium. The medium itself is likely modified due to the stellar mass-loss from the massive star progenitor, which may be Wolf-Rayet stars (for Type Ib/c SNe), red supergiant stars (for type IIP and perhaps IIb and IIL SNe), or some other stellar type. The wind mass-loss parameters determine the density structure of the surrounding medium. Combined with the velocity of the SN shock wave, this regulates the shock acceleration process. In this article we discuss the essential parameters that control the particle acceleration and gamma-ray emission in SNe, with particular reference to the Type IIb SN 1993J. The shock wave expanding into the high density medium leads to fast particle acceleration, giving rise to rapidly-growing plasma…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Neutrino Physics Research
