Studying the Milky Way Pulsar Population with Cosmic-Ray Leptons
Ilias Cholis, Tanvi Karwal, Marc Kamionkowski

TL;DR
This study models the contribution of pulsars to high-energy cosmic-ray electrons and positrons, using recent observational data to constrain pulsar and propagation parameters, and finds pulsars can explain spectral features above 1 TeV.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model combining pulsar properties and cosmic-ray propagation to interpret recent cosmic-ray measurements, constraining key physical parameters.
Findings
Lower energy loss estimates are inconsistent with data.
Pulsar braking indexes >2.5 are disfavored for older pulsars.
Pulsars can account for spectral changes above 1 TeV.
Abstract
Recent measurements of cosmic-ray electron and positron spectra at energies from a GeV to 5 TeV, as well as radio, X-ray and a wide range of gamma-ray observations of pulsar-wind nebulae, indicate that pulsars are significant sources of high-energy cosmic-ray electrons and positrons. Here we calculate the local cosmic-ray energy spectra from pulsars taking into account models for (a) the distribution of the pulsars spin-down properties; (b) the cosmic-ray source spectra; and (c) the physics of cosmic-ray propagation. We then use the measured cosmic-ray fluxes from AMS-02, CALET and DAMPE to constrain the space of pulsar and cosmic-ray-propagation models and in particular, local cosmic-ray diffusion and energy losses, the pulsars' energy-loss time-dependence, and the injected spectra. We find that the lower estimates for the local energy losses are…
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