Revisiting radio synchrotron diagnostics in star-forming galaxies
Maria Werhahn, Christoph Pfrommer, Philipp Girichidis, Joseph Whittingham, L\'ena Jlassi, R\"udiger Pakmor, Rebekka Bieri, Rainer Weinberger, Volker Springel, Freeke van de Voort

TL;DR
This study critically examines common assumptions in interpreting radio continuum observations of star-forming galaxies, revealing the need for more complex models to accurately describe cosmic ray electron transport and spectra.
Contribution
We develop a self-consistent, time-dependent model of cosmic ray electron evolution in galaxy simulations, challenging simplified steady-state assumptions and highlighting the importance of additional transport processes.
Findings
Advection-only models fail to reproduce observed radio halo profiles.
Radio spectra are biased toward young electrons in dense, magnetised regions.
Bremsstrahlung and Coulomb losses significantly influence radio spectra.
Abstract
Radio continuum observations are widely used to study cosmic ray (CR) electron populations and transport processes in star-forming galaxies, but their interpretation relies on several simplifying assumptions. Here, we revisit three common assumptions: that some vertical radio profiles can be explained by CR advection alone, that radio spectra directly trace the galaxy-wide CR electron spectrum, and that bremsstrahlung and Coulomb losses are negligible for radio-emitting electrons. We model radio emission using time-dependent CR electron evolution in a magnetohydrodynamical simulation of an isolated Milky Way-mass galaxy. CR electron spectra are evolved self-consistently along Lagrangian tracer particles with the CREST framework, including injection at supernova remnants, advection with the gas, and spatially and temporally varying radiative losses. We compare these results to commonly…
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