Supernova remnants in clumpy media: particle propagation and gamma-ray emission
Silvia Celli, Giovanni Morlino, Stefano Gabici, Felix Aharonian

TL;DR
This study models how dense clumps within supernova remnants affect particle acceleration and gamma-ray emission, showing that clumps significantly modify the gamma-ray spectrum and could explain observed variability.
Contribution
It provides a detailed numerical analysis of relativistic proton penetration into clumps, revealing their impact on gamma-ray spectra and non-thermal X-ray variability in supernova remnants.
Findings
Proton spectra inside clumps are much harder than in the diffuse medium.
Clumps can modify the gamma-ray spectrum, obscuring the original acceleration spectrum.
Clumps may explain X-ray variability in SNR RX J1713.7-3946.
Abstract
Observations from the radio to the gamma-ray wavelengths indicate that supernova remnant (SNR) shocks are sites of effective particle acceleration. It has been proposed that the presence of dense clumps in the environment where supernovae explode might have a strong impact in shaping the hadronic gamma-ray spectrum. Here we present a detailed numerical study about the penetration of relativistic protons into clumps which are engulfed by a SNR shock, taking into account the magneto-hydrodynamical properties of the background plasma. We show that the spectrum of protons inside clumps is much harder than that in the diffuse inter-clump medium and we discuss the implications for the formation of the spectrum of hadronic gamma rays, which does not reflect anymore the acceleration spectrum of protons, resulting substantially modified inside the clumps due to propagation effects. For the…
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