Non-thermal emission from cosmic rays accelerated in HII regions
M. Padovani (1), A. Marcowith (2), \'A. S\'anchez-Monge (3), F. Meng, (3), P. Schilke (3) ((1) INAF-Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri - Firenze -, Italy, (2) LUPM-Universit\'e de Montpellier - France, (3) I. Physikalisches, Institut, Universit\"at zu K\"oln, Germany)

TL;DR
This paper proposes a model where thermal electrons in HII regions are accelerated to relativistic energies via Fermi acceleration at shocks, explaining observed non-thermal radio emissions and spectral indexes.
Contribution
It introduces a new model demonstrating that local shock acceleration of thermal electrons can account for non-thermal emission in HII regions, matching observations.
Findings
Model reproduces observed flux densities within 20% accuracy.
Constraints on magnetic field strength, density, and shock velocity are derived.
Explains the origin of non-thermal emission and spectral indexes in HII regions.
Abstract
Radio observations at metre-centimetre wavelengths shed light on the nature of the emission of HII regions. Usually this category of objects is dominated by thermal radiation produced by ionised hydrogen, namely protons and electrons. However, a number of observational studies have revealed the existence of HII regions with a mixture of thermal and non-thermal radiation. The latter represents a clue as to the presence of relativistic electrons. However, neither the interstellar cosmic-ray electron flux nor the flux of secondary electrons, produced by primary cosmic rays through ionisation processes, is high enough to explain the observed flux densities. We investigate the possibility of accelerating local thermal electrons up to relativistic energies in HII region shocks. We assumed that relativistic electrons can be accelerated through the first-order Fermi acceleration mechanism and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
