Galactic Cosmic Ray Acceleration with Steep Spectra [HEAP]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2109.11022


Galactic cosmic rays (CRs) are accelerated by astrophysical shocks, primarily supernova remnants (SNRs), via diffusive shock acceleration (DSA), an efficient mechanism that predicts power-law energy distributions of CRs. However, observations of both nonthermal SNR emission and Galactic CRs imply CR spectra that are steeper than the standard DSA prediction, $\propto E^{-2}$. Recent kinetic hybrid simulations suggest that such steep spectra may be the result of a “postcursor”, or drift of CRs and magnetic structures with respect to the thermal plasma behind the shock. Using a semi-analytic model of non-linear DSA, we generalize this result to a wide range of astrophysical shocks. By accounting for the presence of a postcursor, we produce CR energy distributions that are substantially steeper than $E^{-2}$ and consistent with observations. Our formalism reproduces both modestly steep spectra of Galactic SNRs ($\propto E^{-2.2}$) and the very steep spectra of young radio supernovae ($\propto E^{-3}$).

Read this paper on arXiv…

R. Diesing and D. Caprioli
Fri, 24 Sep 21
81/81

Comments: 16 pages, 5 figures, proceedings of the 37th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC 2021). arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:2107.08520