12–23 Jul 2021
Online
Europe/Berlin timezone

Gamma-ray morphology of SNRs and their halos

20 Jul 2021, 12:00
1h 30m
04

04

Talk GAI | Gamma Ray Indirect Discussion

Speaker

Robert Brose (Z_THAT (Theoretische Astroteilchenphysik))

Description

We use our time-dependent acceleration code RATPaC to study the formation of extended gamma-ray halos around supernova remnants and the morphological implications that arise when the high-energetic particles start to escape from the remnant.

We performed spherically symmetric 1-D simulations in which we simultaneously solve the transport equations for cosmic rays, magnetic turbulence, and the hydrodynamical flow of the thermal plasma in a volume large enough to keep all cosmic rays in the simulation.

For older supernova remnants we find strong morphological differences between the
hadronic and the leptonic gamma-ray intensity. At early times both - the inverse-Compton and the Pion-decay morphology - are shell-like. However, as soon as the maximum-energy of the freshly accelerated particles starts to fall, the inverse-Compton morphology starts to become center-filled whereas the Pion-decay morphology retains its shell-like structure. Escaping high-energy electrons start to produce an emission halo around the remnant at this time. There are good prospects for detecting the spectrally hard halo component with the future Cherenkov Telescope Array, likewise for detecting variations of the gamma-ray spectral index across the interior of the remnant, whereas current-generation gamma-ray observatories have insufficient sensitivity.

Keywords

SNR; particle acceleration; gamma-ray halo

Subcategory Theoretical Results

Primary authors

Iurii Sushch (North-West University, South Africa) Martin Pohl (Z_THAT (Theoretische Astroteilchenphysik)) Robert Brose (Z_THAT (Theoretische Astroteilchenphysik))

Presentation materials