Probing hadronic gamma-ray and high-energy neutrino emission from Gaia DR2 star clusters
Alison M.W. Mitchell, Giovanni Morlino, Silvia Celli, Stefano Menchiari, Andreas Specovius

TL;DR
This paper models gamma-ray and neutrino emissions from Gaia DR2 star clusters, identifying potential PeVatrons and guiding future observations, with some clusters already matching model predictions.
Contribution
It introduces a combined model of cosmic ray acceleration at stellar wind shocks and supernova remnants in Gaia DR2 clusters, predicting gamma-ray and neutrino fluxes and identifying promising PeVatron candidates.
Findings
Approximately 10 clusters may be detectable with future facilities.
1-3 clusters could currently be PeVatrons.
Data from three gamma-ray detected clusters align with the model.
Abstract
Young and massive stellar clusters are a potential source of galactic cosmic rays due to at least two acceleration mechanisms. Collective stellar winds from massive stars form a wind-blown bubble with a termination shock at which particle acceleration to PeV energies may be achieved. Furthermore, shock acceleration may occur at supernova remnants (SNRs) expanding inside the bubble. We apply a model of cosmic ray acceleration at both the collective wind termination shock and SNR shocks to the catalog of known stellar clusters derived from the Gaia DR2. Predictions for the secondary fluxes of gamma-ray and neutrino emission are derived based on hadro-nuclear interactions with the surrounding medium. We compare our modelling under baseline and optimistic scenarios to available data, finding consistent results. An anticipated flux range is provided for a shortlist of the most promising…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
