Cosmic-ray acceleration and escape from post-adiabatic Supernova remnants
Robert Brose, Martin Pohl, Iurii Sushch, Oleh Petruk, Taras Kuzyo

TL;DR
This study models cosmic-ray acceleration and escape in post-adiabatic supernova remnants using time-dependent simulations, revealing how cosmic rays evolve and produce gamma-ray emissions consistent with observations.
Contribution
It introduces a 1-D time-dependent simulation approach to study cosmic-ray escape and gamma-ray emission in supernova remnants during the post-adiabatic phase.
Findings
Cosmic rays can escape and form softer spectra with breaks in the 10-100 GeV range.
The total cosmic-ray spectrum has an index of about 2.4 above 10 GeV.
Gamma-ray luminosity peaks around 4,000 years and is higher in low-density environments.
Abstract
Supernova remnants are known to accelerate cosmic rays on account of their non-thermal emission of radio waves, X-rays, and gamma rays. Although there are many models for the acceleration of cosmic rays in Supernova remnants, the escape of cosmic rays from these sources is yet understudied. We use our time-dependent acceleration code RATPaC to study the acceleration of cosmic rays and their escape in post-adiabatic Supernova remnants and calculate the subsequent gamma-ray emission from inverse-Compton scattering and Pion decay. We performed spherically symmetric 1-D simulations in which we simultaneously solve the transport equations for CRs, magnetic turbulence, and the hydrodynamical flow of the thermal plasma in a volume large enough to keep all CRs in the simulation. The transport equations for cosmic-rays and magnetic turbulence are coupled via the cosmic-ray gradient and the…
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