• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Evolution and observational signatures of the cosmic ray electron spectrum in SN 1006
  • Contributor: Winner, Georg; Pfrommer, Christoph; Girichidis, Philipp; Werhahn, Maria; Pais, Matteo
  • Published: Oxford University Press (OUP), 2020
  • Published in: Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 499 (2020) 2, Seite 2785-2802
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1093/mnras/staa2989
  • ISSN: 0035-8711; 1365-2966
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: ABSTRACT Supernova remnants (SNRs) are believed to be the source of Galactic cosmic rays (CRs). SNR shocks accelerate CR protons and electrons which reveal key insights into the non-thermal physics by means of their synchrotron and γ-ray emission. The remnant SN 1006 is an ideal particle acceleration laboratory because it is observed across all electromagnetic wavelengths from radio to γ-rays. We perform 3D magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) simulations where we include CR protons and follow the CR electron spectrum. By matching the observed morphology and non-thermal spectrum of SN 1006 in radio, X-rays, and γ-rays, we gain new insight into CR electron acceleration and magnetic field amplification. (1) We show that a mixed leptonic–hadronic model is responsible for the γ-ray radiation: while leptonic inverse-Compton emission and hadronic pion-decay emission contribute equally at GeV energies observed by Fermi, TeV energies observed by imaging air Cherenkov telescopes are hadronically dominated. (2) We show that quasi-parallel acceleration (i.e. when the shock propagates at a narrow angle to the upstream magnetic field) is preferred for CR electrons and that the electron acceleration efficiency of radio-emitting GeV electrons at quasi-perpendicular shocks is suppressed at least by a factor ten. This precludes extrapolation of current 1D plasma particle-in-cell simulations of shock acceleration to realistic SNR conditions. (3) To match the radial emission profiles and the γ-ray spectrum, we require a volume-filling, turbulently amplified magnetic field and that the Bell-amplified magnetic field is damped in the immediate post-shock region. Our work connects microscale plasma physics simulations to the scale of SNRs.
  • Access State: Open Access