The influence of the 3D Galactic gas structure on cosmic-ray transport and $\gamma$-ray emission
Andr\'es Ram\'irez, Gordian Edenhofer, Torsten A. En{\ss}lin, Philipp Frank, Philipp Mertsch, Vo Hong Minh Phan, Laurin S\"oding, Hanieh Zandinejad, Ralf Kissmann

TL;DR
This study investigates how realistic 3D gas structures in the galaxy influence cosmic-ray transport and gamma-ray emission, revealing significant dependencies and correlations that affect astrophysical observations and models.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of the impact of structured 3D gas distributions on cosmic-ray and gamma-ray modeling, highlighting the importance of gas morphology in these processes.
Findings
CR flux distributions show energy-dependent spatial structures.
Gas density correlates with secondary cosmic-ray species.
Gamma-ray emissivities are highly sensitive to gas structures.
Abstract
Cosmic rays (CRs) play a major role in the dynamics of the interstellar medium (ISM). Their interactions and transport ionize, heat, and push the ISM thereby coupling different regions of it. The spatial distribution of CRs depends on the distribution of their sources as well as the ISM constituents they interact with, such as gas, starlight, and magnetic fields. Particularly, gas influences CR fluxes and -ray emission. We illustrate the influence of realistic and largely structured 3D gas distributions on CR transport and -ray emission, by studying their correlation using the PICARD code and multiple samples of recent 3D reconstructions of the HI and H2 Galactic gas constituents. We adjust the diffusion coefficient and Alfv\'en speed to reproduce local measurements of B/C abundances and find that these parameters depend non-linearly on the local…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
