Novae as Tevatrons: Prospects for CTA and IceCube
Brian D. Metzger, Damiano Caprioli, Indrek Vurm, Andrei Beloborodov,, Imre Bartos, Andrey Vlasov

TL;DR
This paper investigates the potential of novae to accelerate particles to TeV energies, assessing their detectability by CTA and IceCube, and explores magnetic field amplification and cosmic ray acceleration in these transient systems.
Contribution
It provides a quantitative analysis of the maximum particle energy in novae shocks considering ion-neutral damping, and evaluates the prospects for TeV gamma-ray and neutrino detection.
Findings
Maximum particle energy Emax ~ 10 GeV - 10 TeV consistent with spectral cut-offs.
Potential for gamma-ray emission above 100 GeV detectable by CTA.
Challenges in detecting TeV neutrinos with IceCube, but improved if early shock power is higher.
Abstract
The discovery of novae as sources of ~GeV gamma-rays highlights the key role of shocks and relativistic particle acceleration in these transient systems. Although there is evidence for a spectral cut-off above energies ~1-100 GeV at particular epochs in some novae, the maximum particle energy achieved in these accelerators has remained an open question. The high densities of the nova ejecta (~10 orders of magnitude larger than in supernova remnants) render the gas far upstream of the shock neutral and shielded from ionizing radiation. The amplification of the magnetic field needed for diffusive shock acceleration requires ionized gas, thus confining the acceleration process to a narrow photo-ionized layer immediately ahead of the shock. Based on the growth rate in this layer of the hybrid non-resonant cosmic ray current-driven instability (considering also ion-neutral damping), we…
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