http://arxiv.org/abs/2109.14148
Recently, two photons with energy of about 1 PeV have been detected by LHAASO from the Crab nebula, opening an ultra-high energy window for studying the pulsar wind nebulae (PWNe). Remarkably, the LHAASO spectrum at the highest-energy end shows a possible hardening, which could indicate the presence of a new component. A two-component scenario with a main electron component and a secondary proton component has been proposed to explain the whole spectrum of the Crab Nebula, requiring a proton energy of $10^{46}-10^{47}{\rm ergs}$ remaining in the present Crab Nebula. In this paper, we study the energy content of relativistic protons in pulsar winds with the LHAASO data of the Crab Nebula, considering the effect of diffusive escape of relativistic protons. Depending on the extent of the escape of relativistic protons, the total energy of protons lost in the pulsar wind could be 10-100 times larger than that remaining in the nebula presently. We find that the current LHAASO data allows up to $(10-50)\%$ of the spindown energy of pulsars being converted into relativistic protons. The escaping protons from PWNe could make a considerable contribution to the cosmic-ray flux of 10-100 PeV. We also discuss the leptonic scenario for the possible spectral hardening at PeV energies.
R. Liu and X. Wang
Thu, 30 Sep 21
47/82
Comments: 8 pages, 3 figures, accepted by ApJ
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