Observational Evidence for Magnetic Field Amplification in SN 1006
Moeri Tao, Jun Kataoka, Takaaki Tanaka

TL;DR
This paper presents the first observational evidence of magnetic field amplification in SN 1006's shells, indicating magnetic fields are significantly stronger than previously estimated, which impacts cosmic ray acceleration understanding.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence for magnetic field amplification in SN 1006, using broadband radio data and high-resolution imaging to infer magnetic field strengths and structures.
Findings
Radio spectrum steepening indicates a strong magnetic field of ≥ 2 mG.
Radio shell widths are only 3-20 times broader than X-ray shells.
Magnetic fields are locally amplified by a factor of about 100.
Abstract
We report the first observational evidence for magnetic field amplification in the north-east/south-west (NE/SW) shells of supernova remnant SN 1006, one of the most promising sites of cosmic ray (CR) acceleration. In previous studies, the strength of magnetic fields in these shells was estimated to be 25G from the spectral energy distribution, where the synchrotron emission from relativistic electrons accounted for radio to X-rays, along with the inverse Compton emission extending from the GeV to TeV energy bands. However, the analysis of broadband radio data, ranging from 1.37~GHz to 100~GHz, indicated that the radio spectrum steepened from to by = 0.85 0.21. This is naturally interpreted as a cooling break under strong magnetic field of 2~mG. Moreover, the…
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