Spectrum and location of ongoing extreme particle acceleration in Cassiopeia A
Young supernova remnants (SNRs) are believed to be the origin of energetic cosmic rays (CRs) below the "knee" of their spectrum at $\sim3$ petaelectronvolt (PeV, $10^{15}$ eV). Nevertheless, the precise location, duration, and operation of CR acceleration in young SNRs are open questions....
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Zusammenfassung: | Young supernova remnants (SNRs) are believed to be the origin of energetic
cosmic rays (CRs) below the "knee" of their spectrum at $\sim3$
petaelectronvolt (PeV, $10^{15}$ eV). Nevertheless, the precise location,
duration, and operation of CR acceleration in young SNRs are open questions.
Here, we report on multi-epoch X-ray observations of Cassiopeia A (Cas A), a
350-year-old SNR, in the 15-50 keV band that probes the most energetic CR
electrons. The observed X-ray flux decrease $(15\pm1\%)$, contrary to the
expected $>$90\% decrease based on previous radio, X-ray, and gamma-ray
observations, provides unambiguous evidence for CR electron acceleration
operating in Cas A. A temporal model for the radio and X-ray data accounting
for electron cooling and continuous injection finds that the freshly injected
electron spectrum is significantly harder (exponential cutoff power law index
$q=2.15$), and its cutoff energy is much higher ($E_{cut}=36$ TeV) than the
relic electron spectrum ($q=2.44\pm0.03$, $E_{cut}=4\pm1$ TeV). Both electron
spectra are naturally explained by the recently developed modified nonlinear
diffusive shock acceleration (mNLDSA) mechanism. The CR protons producing the
observed gamma rays are likely accelerated at the same location by the same
mechanism as those for the injected electron. The Cas A observations and
spectral modeling represent the first time radio, X-ray, gamma ray and CR
spectra have been self-consistently tied to a specific acceleration mechanism
-- mNLDSA -- in a young SNR. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.16522 |