Particle acceleration in the superwinds of starburst galaxies
Gustavo E. Romero, Ana Laura M\"uller, Markus Roth

TL;DR
This paper investigates cosmic ray acceleration in starburst galaxy superwinds, focusing on NGC 253, and finds that typical conditions limit acceleration to energies below ultra-high energies unless special circumstances occur.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of diffusive shock and stochastic acceleration mechanisms in starburst superwinds, highlighting the limitations and potential for ultra-high energy cosmic ray production.
Findings
Diffusive shock acceleration is strongly attenuated by high mass load.
Stochastic acceleration is limited by starburst age.
Ultra-high energy acceleration requires special conditions or magnetic field amplification.
Abstract
Starbursts are galaxies undergoing massive episodes of star formation. The combined effect of stellar winds from hot stars and supernova explosions creates a high-temperature cavity in the nuclear region of these objects. The very hot gas expands adiabatically and escapes from the galaxy creating a superwind which sweeps matter from the galactic disk. The superwind region in the halo is filled with a multi-phase gas with hot, warm, cool, and relativistic components. The shocks associated with the superwind of starbursts and the turbulent gas region of the bubble inflated by them might accelerate cosmic rays up to high energies. In this work we calculate the cosmic ray production associated with the superwind using parameters that correspond to the nearby southern starburst galaxy NGC 253, which has been suggested as a potential accelerator of ultra-high energy cosmic rays. We evaluate…
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