Embedded star clusters as sources of high-energy cosmic rays: Modelling and constraints
Gilles Maurin, Alexandre Marcowith, Nukri Komin, Fabien, Krayzel, Giovanni Lamanna

TL;DR
This study models gamma-ray emissions from embedded massive star clusters to constrain their role in accelerating cosmic rays, using Fermi/LAT data and predictions for future CTA observations.
Contribution
It introduces a one-zone model for particle acceleration in star clusters and applies it to observational data to estimate gamma-ray fluxes and acceleration efficiencies.
Findings
Less than 10% of stellar wind energy goes into relativistic particles.
No significant gamma-ray emission detected in Fermi/LAT data.
CTA could detect emissions if acceleration efficiency approaches 1%.
Abstract
Massive stars are mainly found in stellar associations. These massive star clusters occur in the heart of giant molecular clouds. The strong stellar wind activity in these objects generates large bubbles and induces collective effects that could accelerate particles up to high energy and produce gamma rays. The best way to input an acceleration origin to the stellar wind interaction in massive stellar cluster is to observe young massive star clusters in which no supernova explosion has occurred yet. This work aims to constrain the part of stellar wind mechanical energy that is converted into energetic particles using the sensitivity of the ongoing Fermi/LAT instrument. This work further provides detailed predictions of expected gamma-ray fluxes in the view of the on-set of the next generation of imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes. A one-zone model where energetic particles are…
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