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Ultra-high Energy Inverse Compton Emission from Galactic Electron Accelerators

M. Breuhaus, J. Hahn, C. Romoli, B. Reville, G. Giacinti, R. Tuffs, J. A. Hinton

2021The Astrophysical Journal Letters31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract It is generally held that >100 TeV emission from astrophysical objects unambiguously demonstrates the presence of PeV protons or nuclei, due to the unavoidable Klein–Nishina suppression of inverse Compton emission from electrons. However, in the presence of inverse Compton dominated cooling, hard high-energy electron spectra are possible. We show that the environmental requirements for such spectra can naturally be met in spiral arms, and in particular in regions of enhanced star formation activity, the natural locations for the most promising electron accelerators: powerful young pulsars. Our scenario suggests a population of hard ultra-high energy sources is likely to be revealed in future searches, and may also provide a natural explanation for the 100 TeV sources recently reported by the High-Altitude Water Cherenkov Observatory.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsCherenkov radiationPopulationAstrophysicsElectronSpectral lineCompton scatteringInverseEnergy (signal processing)Nuclear physicsEmission spectrumAstronomyParticle acceleratorNatural (archaeology)High energyGamma rayAstrophysics and Cosmic PhenomenaParticle Detector Development and PerformanceDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena
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