Identification of Gamma-Rays and Neutrinos from the Cygnus-X Complex Considering Radio Gamma Correlation [HEAP]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1705.08337


The abundance of accelerators and the ambient conditions make Cygnus X a natural laboratory for studying the life cycle of cosmic-rays (CRs). This naturally makes the Cygnus X complex a highly interesting source in neutrino astronomy, in particular concerning a possible detection with the IceCube Neutrino Observatory, which has a good view of the northern hemisphere. In this paper, we model the multiwavelength spectrum of the Cygnus, for the first time using a broad data set from radio, MeV (COMPTEL), GeV (Fermi), TeV (Argo) and 10s of TeV (Milagro) energies. The modeling is performed assuming a leptohadronic model. We solve the steady-state transport equation for leptons and hadrons injected homogeneously in the region and test the role of diffusive transport and energy loss by radiation and interaction. The result shows that diffusion loss plays a significant role in Cygnus X and always exceeds the advection loss as well as almost all other loss processes. The best-fit parameters we find are a magnetic field of $B=8.9\times10^{-6}$ G, a target density of $N_t=19.4$ cm$^{-3}$, a cosmic ray spectral index of $\alpha=2.37$ and neutral gas distribution over a depth of 116 pc. We find that the fit describes the data up to TeV energies well, while the Milagro data are underestimated. This transport model with a broad multiwavelength fit provides a neutrino flux which approaches the sensitivity of IceCube at very high energies ($>$ 50 TeV). In the future, the flux sensitivity of IceCube will be improved. With this rather pessimistic model, leaving out the influence of possible strong, high-energy point sources, we already expect the flux in the Cygnus X region to suffice for IceCube to measure a significant neutrino flux in the next decade.

Read this paper on arXiv…

M. Guenduez, J. Tjus, B. Eichmann, et. al.
Wed, 24 May 17
34/70

Comments: 49 pages, 31 figures