Investigating particle acceleration in the Wolf-Rayet bubble NGC 2359
Anindya Saha, Anandmayee Tej, Santiago del Palacio, Micha\"el De Becker, Paula Benaglia, Ramananda Santra, Ishwara Chandra CH

TL;DR
This study provides empirical evidence of synchrotron emission in the Wolf-Rayet bubble NGC 2359, demonstrating that isolated massive stars can accelerate particles to relativistic energies, supporting their role as sources of Galactic cosmic rays.
Contribution
First detection of non-thermal synchrotron emission in a stellar bubble around a WR star using radio observations, confirming particle acceleration in such environments.
Findings
Spectral indices steeper than -0.5 indicate synchrotron emission.
Turnover below ~1 GHz is mainly due to the Razin-Tsytovich effect.
Supports the hypothesis that isolated massive stars contribute to Galactic cosmic rays.
Abstract
Massive stars have been proposed as candidates to be major factories of Galactic cosmic rays (GCRs). However, this claim lacks enough empirical evidence, especially for isolated stars. The powerful stellar winds from massive stars impact the ambient medium producing strong shocks suitable for accelerating relativistic particles. The detection of non-thermal emission-particularly synchrotron emission in low radio frequencies-serves as a key proof of particle acceleration sites. We aim to assess the potential of isolated massive stars as sources of GCRs. We observed the Wolf-Rayet bubble, NGC 2359, using the upgraded Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope at Band 3 (250-500 MHz) and Band 4 (550-950 MHz). Additionally, we used complementary archival radio datasets at different frequencies to derive the broad spectral energy distribution (SED) for several regions within the bubble. To further…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics
