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Acceleration of Cosmic Rays E.G.Berezhko Yu.G.Shafer Institute of Cosmophysical Research and Aeronomy Yakutsk, Russia • • • • • • • Introduction General properties of Cosmic Ray (CR) acceleration Diffusive shock acceleration Acceleration of CRs in Supernova Remnants (SNRs) Nonthermal emission of individual SNRs SNRs as Galactic CR source Some aspects of UHECR production in GRBs and extragalactic jets • Conclusions Cosmic Rays V.Hess (1912) I ≈ 1 particle/(cm2s) I ~ ε-γ γ ≈ 2.7 Earth LCR ≈ 3×1041 erg/s Atmosphere CR origin problem: i) CR source (?) ii) Acceleration mechanism (?) General remarks • Cosmic Rays (CRs) = atomic nuclei = charged particles • Electric field is needed to generate (accelerate) CR population • High value large scale electric field is not expected in space plasma • Electric field in space plasma is created due to the movement of magnetized clouds • For efficient CR production (acceleration) the system, which contains strong magnetic field and sufficient number of rapidly moving clouds, is needed CR scattering on moving magnetized clouds E = -[w B]/c scattering center vi E B× CR w vf Head-on collision: Δv = vf – vi >0 w=0 Δv = 0 v >> w E B w Overtaken collision: Δv = vf – vi <0 vi vi w=0 w vf vf Elastic scattering: vf = vi Elastic scattering: vf > vi Larger rate of head-on then overtaken collisions efficient CR acceleration General remarks • CR acceleration, operated in the regions of powerful sources, are the most meaningful • The main form of energy available in the space is kinetic energy of large scale supersonic plasma motion (stellar winds, expanding supernova remnants, jets) • Most relevant acceleration mechanisms are those, which directly transform the energy of large scale motion into the population of high energy particles • Intense formation of CR spectra are expected to take place at the shocks and in shear flows Solar wind Diffusive shock acceleration of CRs Krymsky 1977 Bell 1978 log NCR Δp p- log p scattering centers = ( + 2)/( -1) shock compression ratio Frictional Acceleration of Cosmic Rays Berezhko (1981) y dp p dt acc Shear plasma flow w CR 2 scattering center 1 acc dw dy acceleration rate mean scattering time x Frictional CR acceleration is expected to be very efficient in relativistic/subrelativistic jets Energetic requirements to CR sources Requirements to the CR acceleration mechanism Jobs ~ ε –γobs ~ Js/τesc observed CR spectrum γobs = 2.7 Τesc ~ ε-μ ( μ = 0.5 - 0.7) JS ~ε-γS γS = γobs – μ = 2 – 2.2 CR residence time inside the Galaxy source CR spectrum Supernova explosions Supernova explosions supply enough energy to replenish GCRs against their escape from the Galaxy If there is acceleration mechanism which convert ~10% of the explosion energy into CRS Cosmic Ray Flux Possible GCR sources: SNRs knee SNRs (?) Reacceleration (?) ankle Extragalactic (?) GZK cutoff (?) Cosmic Ray diffusive acceleration in Supernova Remnants ESN ~ 1051erg 2 1 for strong shock Krymsky 1977 Bell 1978 shock compression ratio 4 2 Nonlinear kinetic (time-dependent) theory of CR acceleration in SNRs •Gas dynamic equations •CR transport equation •Suprathermal particle injection •Gas heating due to wave dissipation •Time-dependent (amplified) magnetic field Applied to any individual SNR theory gives at any evolutionary phase t>0 : nuclear Np(p,r), NHe(p,r), … and electron Ne(p,r) momentum and spatial distributions, which in turn can be used for determination of the expected nonthermal emissions Fγ(εγ) Nonlinear kinetic model: basic equations Berezhko, Yelshin, Ksenofontov (1994) w 0, t w Hydrodynamic w w Pc Pg , equations t Pg w Pg g w Pg a 1 g ca Pc , t f w f f wf p Q t 3 p ρ(r, t) – gas density w(r, t) – gas velocity Pg(r, t) – gas pressure f (p, r, t) – CR distribution function CR transport equations (Krymsky, 1964) fe w fe 1 p for protons and electrons fe wfe p 2 fe t 3 p p p 1 3 4 c Pc dp 3 0 pc ( p) 3eB p4 f p 2 m2c 2 CR pressure CR diffusion coefficient Q 1u1 ( p pinj ) (r Rs ) 2 4 mpinj source term 9me2 c 2 1 2 2 4r0 B p Synchrotron loss time u = Vs - w Particle spectrum in/near acceleration region N inj / N η > 10-5 → injection rate (parameter) efficient CR production Nonlinear effects due to accelerated CRs • Modification of the shock structure due to CR pressure gradient Non power law (concave) CR spectrum • Magnetic field amplification (Lucek & Bell, 2000) Increase of maximum CR energy Increase of π0-decay gamma-ray emission over IC emission CR spectrum inside SNR lg N p N p 2 2 p 2 mpc ppmax ~ RSVSB test particle limit p pmax lg p maximum CR momentum due to geometrical factors (Berezhko 1996) Main nonthermal emission produced by Cosmic Rays (how one can “see” CR sources) • Synchrotron radiation e 0.1 10GeV e 1 100TeV radio B X-ray e • Inverse Compton scattering gamma-rays e 1 100TeV e • Nuclear collisions N 0 gamma-rays p p 1010 1015 eV Nonthermal emission of SNRs • Test for CR acceleration theory • Determination of SNR physical parameters: - CR acceleration efficiency - Interior magnetic field B Relevant SNR parameters SNR age t known for historical SNRs ISM density NH influences SNR dynamics and gamma-ray production; deduced from thermal X-rays magnetic field B influences CR acceleration & synchrotron losses; deduced from fit of observed synchrotron spectrum; expected to be strongly amplified B >> BISM injection rate η (fraction of gas particles, involved in acceleration) influences accelerated CR number, shock modification, CR spectral shape; deduced from observed shape of radio emission CR spectrum inside SNR N p 2 lg N p 2 e B p 10G radio m p c pl e 4 /1GHz GeV B /10 G α = (γ – 1)/2 e pmax Vs B 1/ 2 3 test particle limit X-ray B 10 G pl t 1 B 2 p 2 p e max p pmax lg p due to synchrotron losses Steep radio-synchrotron spectrum Sν ~ν -α (>0.5, >2) is indirect evidence of i) efficient proton acceleration and ii) high magnetic field B>>10G Cassiopeia A Type Ib Distance 3.4 kpc Age Radius 345 yr 2 pc Circumstellar medium: free WR wind + swept up RSG wind + free RSG wind Tuffs (1986), VLA Circumstellar medium MS → RSG → BSG → SN Ng, cm-3 Borkowski et al. (1996) CSM number density current SN shock position 10 shell 1 BSG wind 1 d = 3.4 kpc RSG wind 2 Mej = 2 MSun r, pc ESN = 0.4×1051 erg Berezhko et al. (2003) Synchrotron Emission from Cassiopeia A Experiment: radio (Baars et al. 1977), 1.2 mm data (Mezger et al. 1986), 6 m data (Tuffs et al. 1997), X-ray data (Allen et al. 1997) Proton injection rate η = 3×10--3 Interior magnetic field Bd ≈ 0.5 mG Strong SN shock modification α ≈ 0.8 Steep concave spectrum at ν < 1012 Hz Smooth connection with X-ray region (ν > 1018 Hz) Magnetic field inside SNRs Emission (X-ray, γ-ray) due to high energy electrons Line of sight Rs ρ J Low field Bd BISM 5G L 0.1RS L ρ Bd BISM J High (amplified) field L 0.1RS L Bd 3 / 2 Unique possibility of magnetic field determination! -Rs 0 Rs ρ Filamentary structure of X-ray emission of young SNRs -consequence of strongly amplified magnetic field, leading to strong synchrotron losses Chandra Cassiopeia A Chandra SN 1006 Projected X-ray brightness of Cassiopeia A direct evidence for magnetic field amplification Theory: Berezhko & Völk (2004) Bd = 10 μG Bd = 500 μG Experiment (Vink & Laming 2003) confirms high internal magnetic field Bd 0.5mG extracted from the fit of volume Integrated synchrotron flux (Berezhko, Pühlhofer & Völk 2003) For strong losses L ( acc 10 cm Bd 0.5 l 16 l L / 7 103 Rs 2/3 mG emissivity scale brightness scale angular distance loss ) Integral gamma-ray energy spectrum of Cas A Components: Hadronic (π0) Inverse Compton (IC) Nonthermal bremsstrahlung (NB) Confirmation of HEGRA measurement is very much needed Already done by Magic (ICRC, Merida 2007)! SNR RX J1713.7-3946 X-rays (nonthermal) ROSAT (Pfeffermann & Aschenbach 1996) ASCA (Koyama et al. 1997; Slane et al. 1999) XMM (Cassam-Chenai et al. 2004; Hiraga et al. 2005) Gamma-ray image (HESS) Radio-emission ATCA (Lazendic et al. 2004) VHE gamma-rays CANGAROO (Muraishi et al. 2000) CANGAROO II (Enomoto et al. 2002) HESS (Aharonian et al. 2005) Aharonian et al. (2005) Spatially integrated spectral energy distribution of RX J1713.7-3946 Experiment: Aharonian et al. (2006) Theory: Berezhko & Völk (2006) required interior magnetic field Bd = 126 μG Magnetic field amplification ρISM Beff Results of modeling (Lucek & Bell, 2000) + Spectral properties of SNR synchrotron emission + VS BISM Fine structure of nonthermal X-ray emission SNR magnetic field is considerably amplified L Beff2/8π ≈ 10-2ρISMVS2 Bd = Beff >> BISM SNR magnetic field • Influences synchrotron emission • Determines CR diffusion mobility: Κ ~ p/(ZBd) CR diffusion coefficient (Bohm limit) • Influences CR maximum momentum pmax: pmax ~ Z e Bd RS VS nuclear charge number Energy spectrum of CRs, produced in SNRs Berezhko & Völk (2007) Amplified magnetic field Bd2/(8π) ≈ 10-2ρ0VS2 Bd >> BISM Cosmic Ray Flux CR sources: Supernova remnants knee 1 Supernova remnants knee 2 Extragalactic (?) GZK cutoff (?) Energy spectrum of CRs Dip scenario Dip p + γ → p + e+ + e- GZK cutoff p+γ→N+π Experiment: Akeno-AGASA (Takeda et al. 2003) HiRes (Abbasi et al. 2005) Yakutsk (Egorova et al. 2004) CR spectrum, produced in SNRs CR spectrum from JEG~ε -2.7 extragalactic sources (Berezinsky et al.2006) Energy spectrum of CRs Ankle scenario Extragalactic (AGNs, GRBs…) SNRs JEG~ε -2 Berezinsky et al.(2006) SNRs + reacceleration Mean logarithm of CR atomic number Ankle scenario Dip scenario Precise measurements of CR composition is needed to discriminate two scenarios Experiment: KASKADE (Hörandel 2005) Yakutsk (Ivanov et al.2003) HiRes (Hörandel 2003) Fireball model of Gamma-ray bursts Rees & Meszaros (1992) R Energy release (supernova ?) Forward Shock E ISM dΩ ~ 10-2 π E ≈ 1051 erg ESS ≈ 3×1053 erg Fireball Γ ≈ 100 Lorentz factor (?) spherically symmetric analog Γ ~ (ESS/NISM)1/2 R-3/2 R ~ t1/4 CR acceleration in GRBs relativistic shock (Γ >> 1) Achterberg et al. (2001) assumption: isotropic CR diffusion in downstream region εmax ≈ e BuΓ R c unamplified magnetic field Bu = BISM = 10 μG maximum proton energy εmax ≈ 5 × 107mpc2 amplified magnetic field Bu2/8π = 0.1Γ2 ρISMc2 NCR(ε)~ ε-γ εmax ≈ 5 × 1013mpc2 γ ≈ 2.2 GRBs are powerful extragalactic sources of CRs (?) Problem Bd ~ Γ2 Bu >> Bu & Bdll >> Bd ┴ strongly anisotropic CR diffusion low chance for CRs to recross shock from downstream to upstream inefficient CR production downstream upstream VS Bd Bu shock (e.g. Ostrowski & Niemiec, 2006) CR acceleration at late evolutionary stage (nonrelativistic shock) εmax ≈ e Bu R c R(Γ = 1) =(ESS/3ρISMc2)1/3 ρISM = NISMmp Bu2/8π = 0.1ρISMc2 For InterStellar Medium density amplified magnetic field ESS= 3× 1053 erg, NISM = 1 cm-3 However assumption Realistic numbers: then εmax = 3 × 1010 mpc2 Lγ = Qe , Pe ~ Γ2ρISM c2 Pp ~ Γ2ρISM c2 ESS≈1055 erg seems to be unrealistic Pe = 10-2Pp εmax ≈ 1011 mpc2 Active Galactic Nuclei Jets Powerful source of nonthermal emission Powerful source of Cosmic Rays Γ ≈ 10 Lorentz factor Shear flow Effective frictional acceleration (e.g. Ostrowski, 2004) Shock Diffusive shock acceleration Conclusions • CR acceleration in SNRs is able to provide the observed Galactic CR spectrum up to the energy ε ≈ 1017 eV • Two possibility for Galactic CR spectrum formation: - Dip scenario ( CRs from Galactic SNRs at ε < 1017 eV + Extragalactic CRs at ε > 1018 eV ) - Ankle scenario ( CRs from Galactic SNRs at ε < 1017 eV + Reaccelerated CRs at 1017 < ε < 1018 eV + Extragalactic CRs at ε >019eV) • Precise measurements of CR spectrum and composition at ε > 1017 eV are needed to discriminate the above two possibilities • Acceleration by subrelativistic/nonrelativistic shocks in GRBs (or AGN jets) and frictional acceleration in AGN jets are potential sources of Ultra High Energy CRs Supernovae = star explosions lg( Luminosity) 0 -4 SN I H lines SN II H lines -8 0 100 200 t, day 300 SN Ia MCO<1.4MSun ( 15 % ) No central objects SNR in uniform ISM thermonuclear explosion SN II/Ib MCO>1.4MSun ( 85 %) pulsar / black hole SNR in CSM, modified by progenitor star wind core collapse ν detected from SN1987 A Cosmic Ray Flux CR sources: Supernova remnants knee 1 Supernova remnants (?) Reacceleration (?) knee 2 Extragalactic (?) GZK cutoff (?) Structure of the shock modified due to CR backreaction Flow speed u downstream upstream precursor Pc u0 CR pressure u1 u2 subshock shock front Acceleration sites classical (unmodified) shock σ = u0/u2 = modified shock σ > 4, σS < 4 x p < mpc p >> mpc σS = u1/u2 =4 γ>2 γ<2 Cutoff of CR spectrum due to CR interaction with CMB Zatcepin, Kuzmin (1966) Greisen (1966) Cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation CR source π± E = 1030 eV π0 E=6×1019 eV Galaxy Projected radial profile of TeV-emission (normalized to a peak values) Smoothed with Gaussian PSF of width Δψ = 0.1o Jγmax/Jγmin ≈ 2.3 consistent with HESS value L L = 0.07 RS Jγmax/Jγmin ≈ 8 Spatially integrated spectral energy distribution of RX J1713.7-3946 (Vela Jr) Low (inefficient) protons injection/acceleration, Bd = 15μG Projected radial profile of 1 keV X-ray emission (normalized to a peak values) smoothed with PSF of XMM-Newton (Δψ = 15’’) Experiment: L=1.2×1018 cm (Hiraga et al. 2005) L Theory: L=1.15×1018 cm (Bd = 126 μG) test-particle limit Bd = 20 μG inconsistent with experiment CSM structure wind shell bubble Interstellar medium SN σshNISM lg Ng NISM CSM number density current SN shock position Nb << NISM Rsh lg r