Are Odd Radio Circles virial shocks around massive galaxies? Implications for cosmic-ray diffusion in the circumgalactic medium
Shotaro Yamasaki, Kartick C. Sarkar, Zhaozhou Li

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether Odd Radio Circles are virial shocks around massive galaxies, exploring cosmic-ray diffusion in the circumgalactic medium and comparing theoretical models with observations.
Contribution
It proposes that ORCs originate from virial shocks around massive halos and estimates the cosmic-ray diffusion coefficient in the low-density CGM.
Findings
CR diffusion coefficient estimated as ~10^{30} cm^2/s
Radio flux density marginally consistent with virial shock origin
CR diffusion broadens the radio-emitting shell to match observations
Abstract
Recently, a new population of circular radio (GHz) objects have been discovered at high Galactic latitudes, called the Odd Radio Circles (ORCs). A fraction of the ORCs encircles massive galaxies in the sky with stellar mass situated at -, suggesting a possible physical connection. In this work, we explore the possibility that these radio circles originate from the accretion shocks/virial shocks around massive () dark matter halo at . We found that the radio flux density of the emitting shell is marginally consistent with the ORCs. We also find that pure advection of electrons from the shock results in a radio-emitting shell that is considerably narrower than the observed one due to strong inverse-Compton cooling of electrons. Instead, we show that the diffusion of cosmic-ray (CR) electrons plays a significant…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
