Protostars: Forges of cosmic rays?
M. Padovani (1, 2), A. Marcowith (1), P. Hennebelle (3), K., Ferri\`ere (4) ((1) Laboratoire Univers et Particules de Montpellier,, Universit\'e de Montpellier, France, (2) INAF-Osservatorio Astrofisico di, Arcetri, Firenze, Italy, (3) CEA, IRFU, SAp, Centre de Saclay,

TL;DR
This paper investigates how cosmic rays are accelerated within young protostars, proposing mechanisms that explain observed high ionisation rates and synchrotron emission, with implications for star and planet formation.
Contribution
It introduces a model for diffusive shock acceleration of cosmic rays in protostellar environments, identifying jet shocks and protostellar surfaces as key acceleration sites.
Findings
Jet shocks can accelerate CR protons to relativistic energies.
Protostellar surfaces can efficiently accelerate CR protons during collapse.
Re-acceleration in shocks boosts CR electrons to relativistic energies.
Abstract
Galactic cosmic rays (CR) are particles presumably accelerated in supernova remnant shocks that propagate in the interstellar medium up to the densest parts of molecular clouds, losing energy and their ionisation efficiency because of the presence of magnetic fields and collisions with molecular hydrogen. Recent observations hint at high levels of ionisation and at the presence of synchrotron emission in protostellar systems, which leads to an apparent contradiction. We want to explain the origin of these CRs accelerated within young protostars as suggested by observations. Our modelling consists of a set of conditions that has to be satisfied in order to have an efficient CR acceleration through diffusive shock acceleration. We analyse three main acceleration sites, then we follow the propagation of these particles through the protostellar system up to the hot spot region. We find that…
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