Galactic PeVatrons and helping to find them: Effects of Galactic absorption on the observed spectra of very high energy $\gamma$-ray sources
Troy A. Porter, Gavin P. Rowell, Gudlaugur Johannesson, and Igor V., Moskalenko

TL;DR
This paper investigates how Galactic absorption affects the observed spectra of very high energy gamma-ray sources, crucial for identifying cosmic-ray PeVatrons, and demonstrates that correcting for this absorption can significantly alter the inferred spectral cutoffs.
Contribution
It provides a quantitative analysis of pair-absorption effects on gamma-ray spectra using 3D ISRF models, improving the accuracy of PeVatron identification.
Findings
Spectral cutoffs could be underestimated by factors of a few without correction.
ISRF correction can increase estimated spectral cutoff energies by up to a factor of 2.
Revised estimates suggest potential PeV acceleration in sources near Sgr A*.
Abstract
Identification of the cosmic-ray (CR) `PeVatrons', which are sources capable of accelerating particles to eV energies and higher, may lead to resolving the long-standing question of the origin of the spectral feature in the all-particle CR spectrum known as the `knee'. Because CRs with these energies are deflected by interstellar magnetic fields identification of individual sources and determination of their spectral characteristics is more likely via very high energy -ray emissions, which provide the necessary directional information. However, pair production on the interstellar radiation field (ISRF) and cosmic microwave background leads to steepening of the high-energy tails of -ray spectra, and should be corrected for to enable true properties of the spectrum at source to be recovered. Employing recently developed three-dimensional ISRF models this…
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