Study on the escape timescale of high-energy particles from supernova remnants through thermal X-ray properties
Hiromasa Suzuki, Aya Bamba, Ryo Yamazaki, Yutaka Ohira

TL;DR
This study analyzes the escape timescale of high-energy particles from supernova remnants by examining thermal X-ray properties and gamma-ray spectra, revealing a typical escape timescale of around 100,000 years and highlighting environmental diversity.
Contribution
It provides a systematic analysis of particle escape evolution in SNRs using gamma-ray spectral features and thermal plasma ages, offering new insights into escape mechanisms and timescales.
Findings
Particle escape timescale is approximately 100 kyr.
Gamma-ray cutoff/break energies decrease with plasma age.
Environmental diversity affects particle escape properties.
Abstract
In this decade, GeV/TeV gamma-ray observations of several supernova remnants (SNRs) have implied that accelerated particles are escaping from their acceleration sites. However, when and how they escape from the SNR vicinities are yet to be understood. Recent studies have suggested that the particle escape might develop with thermal plasma ages of the SNRs. In this paper, we present a systematic study on time evolution of particle escape using thermal X-ray properties and gamma-ray spectra. We used 38 SNRs which associate with GeV/TeV gamma-ray emissions. We conducted spectral fittings on the gamma-ray spectra using exponential cutoff power law and broken power law models to estimate the exponential cutoff or the break energies, both of which are indicators of particle escape. The plots of the gamma-ray cutoff/break energies over the plasma ages show similar tendencies to those…
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