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Testing the origin of high- energy cosmic rays

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Presentation on theme: "Testing the origin of high- energy cosmic rays"— Presentation transcript:

1 Testing the origin of high- energy cosmic rays
A.Vladimirov G.Johannesson IVM T.Porter Adriani+2011

2 Spectrum of cosmic rays
All particle CR spectrum is almost featureless: the knee the ankle GZK cutoff These were the only features in >12 decades in energy and >32 decades in intensity! New break? Galactic Galactic+extragalactic GZK cutoff extragalactic

3 PAMELA: Proton and helium spectra vs. rigidity
Hardening dip break rigidity The same break rigidity for p and He ~240 GV The spectrum becomes flatter above the break Spectral softening near the break, the “dip” The differences between p and He spectral indices Δ = δp - δHe are about the same below and above the break

4 PAMELA: p/He ratio break rigidity
The p/He ratio is smooth and does not have a feature at the break rigidity

5 p/He ratio (Blasi & Amato 2011)
Proposed a model where the difference between p and He spectral slopes is explained by fragmentation of He Requires τfragm < τesc Works only for Kolmogorov diffusion (δ ~1/3) Requires fine tuning: grammage ×2, somewhat different D0 Required grammage is too large (excess B, pbars) Does not take into account production of secondary 3He (data: total He = 3He+4He) Overproduces secondary species We ADOPT different injection spectra for p and Z>1 ad hoc

6 Rationale Scenario P: interstellar Propagation effects
Change in CR transport: D ~ ρδ, δ = 0.3/0.15 below/above the break Scenario I(a): CR Injection effects, a source with spectral break Breaks in the injection spectrum of CR sources Scenario I(b): CR Injection effects, a composite source Two types of CR sources (soft and hard) uniformly mixed in the Galaxy Scenario H: local High energy source Low energy CRs are produced by sources distributed in the Galaxy High energy CRs are coming from a local source Scenario L: local Low energy source (special case!) High energy CRs are produced by sources distributed in the Galaxy Low energy CRs are coming from a local source No reacceleration, δ = 0.67 below/above the break Scenario R: Reference model Tuned to pre-PAMELA CR data Calculations employ GALPROP Webrun:

7 Summary of model parameters
Propagation Reference Injection Local sources The values of propagation parameters are taken from the Bayesian analysis by Trotta+’2011 and slightly adjusted (except model L)

8 Diffusion coefficient
CR injection spectra and the diffusion coefficient in different scenarios Injection spectra Diffusion coefficient L R, I ρ2.2 q(ρ), a.u. ρ2.2 q(ρ), a.u. D(ρ)/β, 1028 cm-2 s-1 P, H Rigidity ρ, GV Rigidity ρ, GV Propagation: stochastic reacceleration model, except scenario L Injection spectra adjusted to match the CR p and He spectra

9 P and He spectra in different scenarios
Reference P and He spectra in different scenarios All scenarios are tuned to the data, except the Reference scenario Scenarios L and H: the local source component is calculated by the subtraction of the propagated Galactic spectrum from the data The local source is assumed to be close to us, so no propagation; only primary CR species R Propagation Injection P I Local LE Local HE L H

10 B/C ratio in different scenarios
Reference B/C ratio in different scenarios All scenarios reproduce B/C below ~300 GeV/nucleon Above 300 GeV/nucleon B/C is flatter in Scenario P Local sources are assumed to produce only primary isotopes B/C is steeper in scenario L and H, but due to the different reasons Scenario L: P-L index of the diffusion coefficient steepens to 0.67 Scenario H: there is no Boron in the local source, but there is Carbon Propagation Injection Local LE Local HE

11 Antiprotons and pbar/p ratio in different scenarios
All scenarios are consistent with existing antiproton data (except scenario L) Predict different behavior at HE

12 p/He ratio and CR anisotropy ratio in different scenarios
Ptuskin+’2006 The lower anisotropy figure illustrates the effect of local sources, but it depends on their assumed ages, distances, and the spectra of accelerated particles Local sources

13 Mid-latitude diffuse emission in different scenarios
Reference Mid-latitude diffuse emission in different scenarios Propagation Injection All scenarios are consistent with the Fermi- LAT data Predictions for π0-decay component at HE are different Intensities of other components (IC, isotropic, sources) are comparable Requires large statistics at HE to distinguish Local LE Local HE

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15 Conclusions There is no any single model capable to explain all observed features The model predictions can be tested by current (e.g., AMS-2, CREAM) or near future experiments Scenario P (interstellar propagation effects) is the favorite scenario, although other scenarios can’t be ruled out yet Important issue is the reality of the “dip” feature, which can only be understood in Scenario L Scenario L (plain diffusion model) seems to be ruled out on the base of pbar and anisotropy arguments Submitted to ApJ (arXiv: )

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17 Backup slides

18 Posterior probability distributions from Bayesian analysis (Trotta+’2011)
Normalization of the diffusion coeff. and its index color bar – 68%, 95% error ranges vertical line – posterior mean ✗ - the best fit Reacceleration model (GALPROP) δ = 0.3 – very close to classical value 1/3 for Kolmogorov diffusion All parameters are very close to those derived by the “eye-fitting” method Alfven speed Halo size Injection index below/above the 1 GV

19 CRs in the Interstellar Medium
42 sigma ( data) HESS SNR RX J PSF ISM Chandra X,γ HESS e synchrotron B IC Fermi P He CNO ISRF •diffusion •energy losses •diffusive reacceleration •convection •production of secondaries bremss WIMP annihil. gas P _ π P, X,γ e + - π + - e gas solar modulation P _ π + - p LiBeB Flux He CNO e 20 GeV/n BESS CR species: Only 1 location modulation ACE PAMELA helio-modulation

20 Secondary/primary nuclei ratio & CR propagation
Typical parameters (model-dependent): D ~ 1028 (ρ/1 GV)α cm2/s α ≈ Zh ~ 4-6 kpc; VA ~ 30 km/s Be10/Be9 Interstellar Zh increase Using secondary/primary nuclei ratio (B/C) & radioactive isotopes (e.g. Be10): Diffusion coefficient and its index Galactic halo size Zh Propagation mode and its parameters (e.g., reacceleration VA, convection Vz) Propagation parameters are model-dependent

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22 The Likelihood Function
Θ – a set of model parameters ϕ = {ϕ1, ϕ2, ϕ3, ϕ4} – a set of modulation potentials; the number of modulation potentials corresponds to the number of data sets (experiments) ΦX(Ei, Θ,ϕ) – the computed spectrum for CR species X ΦXij – the measured spectrum (i runs through the data points for each experiment j) σij – reported standard deviations τj – error rescaling parameters The full likelihood for all 5 experimental data sets: – assuming that individual energy bins are independent

23 Sampling algorithm SuperBayeS code (SUpersymmetry Parameters Extraction Routines for Bayesian Statistics, Ruiz de Austri+’06, Trotta+’08): Markov Chain Monte Carlo methods Nested sampling algorithm by John Skilling’04,06 and MultiNest by Feroz&Hobson’08 Computational effort ~13 CPU years, ~1.4×105 samples Fit a total of 76 data points, 16 parameters, best fit chi-squared/dof ~ 1 Posterior mean <Θ> ≈ M-1 Σi=0…M-1 Θ(i)

24 Input parameters and prior ranges

25 2D posterior probability distributions
Contours enclose 68% and 95% probability regions - best fit - posterior mean

26 Nuisance parameters Color bar – 68%, 95% error ranges
Vertical line – posterior mean ✗ – best fit ∨- prior value (as reported by experiments)

27 Summary of constraints on all parameters


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