The contribution of winds of star clusters to the Galactic cosmic-ray population
Giada Peron, Sabrina Casanova, Stefano Gabici, Vardan Baghmanyan and, Felix Aharonian

TL;DR
This paper investigates how winds from star clusters contribute to the Galactic cosmic-ray population, providing evidence that they can convert a significant fraction of wind power into cosmic rays, thus playing a notable role in cosmic-ray origins.
Contribution
It presents the first unbiased estimate of stellar cluster wind contribution to cosmic rays, demonstrating that 1-10% of cosmic rays originate from these objects.
Findings
Star clusters contribute approximately 1-10% to the Galactic cosmic-ray population.
More than 1% of wind mechanical power in star clusters is converted into cosmic rays.
Young star clusters in the Vela region show efficient cosmic-ray acceleration without supernova contamination.
Abstract
Cosmic rays are energetic nuclei that permeate the entire Galactic disk. Their existence requires the presence of powerful particle accelerators. While Galactic supernova explosions may supply the required energy, there is growing evidence that they cannot explain all of the observed properties of cosmic rays, such as their maximum particle energy and isotopic composition. Among Galactic objects, winds from stellar clusters meet the energetic requirement and provide a suitable environment for particle acceleration. The recent detection of some of these objects in gamma rays confirms that they indeed harbor high-energy particles.However, as most supernovae explode inside stellar clusters, it is difficult to distinguish the contribution of winds to particle acceleration. Here we report the detection of young star clusters in the nearby Vela molecular ridge star forming region. The young…
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