Galactic cosmic-ray scattering due to intermittent structures
Creators
Abstract
Cosmic rays (CRs) with energies ≪ TeV comprise a significant component of the interstellar medium (ISM). Major uncertainties in CR behaviour on observable scales (much larger than CR gyroradii) stem from how magnetic fluctuations scatter CRs in pitch angle. Traditional first-principles models, which assume these magnetic fluctuations are weak and uniformly scatter CRs in a homogeneous ISM, struggle to reproduce basic observables such as the dependence of CR residence times and scattering rates on rigidity. We therefore explore a new category of ‘patchy’ CR scattering models, wherein CRs are pre-dominantly scattered by intermittent strong scattering structures with small volume-filling factors. These models produce the observed rigidity dependence with a simple size distribution constraint, such that larger scattering structures are rarer but can scatter a wider range of CR energies. To reproduce the empirically inferred CR scattering rates, the mean free path between scattering structures must be ℓ_(mfp) ~ 10 pc at GeV energies. We derive constraints on the sizes, internal properties, mass/volume-filling factors, and the number density any such structures would need to be both physically and observationally consistent. We consider a range of candidate structures, both large scale (e.g. H ii regions) and small scale (e.g. intermittent turbulent structures, perhaps even associated with radio plasma scattering) and show that while many macroscopic candidates can be immediately ruled out as the primary CR scattering sites, many smaller structures remain viable and merit further theoretical study. We discuss future observational constraints that could test these models.
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Acknowledgement
ISB was supported by the DuBridge Postdoctoral Fellowship at the Caltech as well as by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) through Hubble Fellowship grant HST-HF2-51525.001-A awarded by the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Incorporated, under NASA contract NAS 5–26555. Support for PFH was provided by National Science Foundation (NSF) Research Grants 1911233, 20009234, NSF CAREER grant 1455342, NASA grants 80NSSC18K0562, HST-AR-15800.001-A. PK was supported by the Lyman Spitzer, Jr Fellowship at Princeton University. JS acknowledges the support of the Royal Society Te Apārangi, through Marsden-Fund grant MFP-UOO2221 and Rutherford Discovery Fellowship RDF-U001804. This research was facilitated by the Multimessenger Plasma Physics Center (MPPC), NSF grant PHY-2206610, by a Simons Investigator award to EQ, and by NSF AST grant 2107872.
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Additional details
Related works
- Is new version of
- Discussion Paper: arXiv:2308.06316 (arXiv)
Funding
- California Institute of Technology
- DuBridge Postdoctoral Fellowship -
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration
- HST-HF2-51525.001-A
- Space Telescope Science Institute
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration
- NAS 5-26555
- National Science Foundation
- 1911233
- National Science Foundation
- 20009234
- National Science Foundation
- 1455342
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration
- 80NSSC18K0562
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration
- HST-AR-15800.001-A
- Princeton University
- Royal Society Te Apārangi
- MFP-UOO2221
- Royal Society Te Apārangi
- RDF-U001804
- National Science Foundation
- PHY-2206610
- National Science Foundation
- 2107872
Dates
- Submitted
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2023-08-11
- Accepted
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2024-01-23
- Available
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2024-01-27Published
- Available
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2024-02-08Corrected and typeset