MHD simulations of proton- versus lepton-dominated cosmic rays in nonthermal filaments show minimal observable differences and motivate a turbulence-based formation scenario for Galactic Center NTFs.
Galactic cosmic rays after the AMS-02 observations
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
The unprecedented quality of the data collected by the AMS-02 experiment onboard the International Space Station allowed us to address subtle questions concerning the origin and propagation of cosmic rays. Here we discuss the implications of these data for the injection spectrum of elements with different masses and for the diffusion coefficient probed by cosmic rays through their journey from the sources to the Earth. We find that the best fit to the spectra of primary and secondary nuclei requires (1) a break in the energy dependence of the diffusion coefficient at energies $\sim 300$ GV; (2) an injection spectrum that is the same for all nuclei heavier than helium, and different injections for both protons and helium. Moreover, if to force the injection spectrum of helium to be the same as for heavier nuclei, the fit to oxygen substantially worsens. Accounting for a small, $X_{s}\sim 0.4~\rm g~cm^{-2}$, grammage accumulated inside the sources leads to a somewhat better fit to the B/C ratio but makes the difference between He and other elements even more evident. The statistic and systematic error bars claimed by the AMS collaboration exceed the error that is expected from calculations once the uncertainties in the cross sections of production of secondary nuclei are taken into account. In order to make this point more quantitative, we present a novel parametrization of a large set of cross sections, relevant for cosmic ray physics, and we introduce the uncertainty in the branching ratios in a way that its effect can be easily grasped.
fields
astro-ph.HE 2years
2026 2verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2representative citing papers
Numerical transport modeling of the Cygnus Bubble finds that spatially dependent Bohm diffusion and strong suppression of the diffusion coefficient over at least 150 pc are required to match the observed gamma-ray spectrum and morphology, implying extreme assumptions for steady hadronic acceleration
citing papers explorer
-
The Effects of Cosmic Ray Protons on Galactic Nonthermal Filaments
MHD simulations of proton- versus lepton-dominated cosmic rays in nonthermal filaments show minimal observable differences and motivate a turbulence-based formation scenario for Galactic Center NTFs.
-
Suppressed diffusion and gamma-ray emission from the Cygnus Bubble
Numerical transport modeling of the Cygnus Bubble finds that spatially dependent Bohm diffusion and strong suppression of the diffusion coefficient over at least 150 pc are required to match the observed gamma-ray spectrum and morphology, implying extreme assumptions for steady hadronic acceleration