Highly collimated microquasar jets as efficient cosmic-ray sources
G.J. Escobar, L.J. Pellizza, G.E. Romero

TL;DR
This paper investigates how highly collimated microquasar jets can efficiently produce cosmic rays, potentially explaining observed spectra and offering an alternative to supernova remnants as primary sources.
Contribution
It demonstrates that collimated microquasar jets are highly efficient cosmic-ray sources, producing spectra closer to observations and quantifying their potential contribution to Galactic cosmic rays.
Findings
Collimated jets can deliver up to 1% of their proton luminosity into cosmic rays.
Collimation increases efficiency by up to four orders of magnitude.
Produced cosmic-ray spectra have a steeper index (~2.3) matching observations.
Abstract
Supernova remnants are believed to be the main sites where Galactic cosmic rays originate. This scenario, however, fails to explain some of the features observed in the cosmic-ray spectrum. Microquasars have been proposed as additional candidates, because their non-thermal emission indicates the existence of efficient particle acceleration mechanisms in their jets. A promising scenario envisages the production of relativistic neutrons in the jets, that decay outside the system injecting relativistic protons to the surroundings. The first investigations of this scenario suggest that microquasars might be fairly alternative cosmic-ray sources. We aim at assessing the role played by the degree of collimation of the jet on the cosmic-ray energetics in the neutron-carrier scenario, as well as the properties of the emission region. Our goals are to explain the Galactic component of the…
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