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Shock acceleration of cosmic rays Tony Bell Imperial College, London.

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Presentation on theme: "Shock acceleration of cosmic rays Tony Bell Imperial College, London."— Presentation transcript:

1 Shock acceleration of cosmic rays Tony Bell Imperial College, London

2 Reynolds, 1986 SNR suitable CR source below 10 15 eV Typical max. radius of rapidly expanding SNR ~ 10 17 m Radio image of SN1006 x-ray image of SN1006 Long, 2003

3 Shock in magnetised plasma Shock High velocity plasma Low velocity plasma Upstream ISMDownstream shocked plasma B2B2 B1B1 B 2 >B 1

4 Cosmic ray wanders around shock -scattered by magnetic field High velocity plasma Low velocity plasma B2B2 B1B1 CR track Due to scattering, CR recrosses shock many times

5 Shock acceleration gives right spectrum High velocity plasma Low velocity plasma Upstream ISM Downstream shocked plasma B2B2 B1B1 B 2 >B 1 Simple diffusion theory: Prob of CR crossing shock times is Shock velocity: v s  = v s /c Average fractional energy gained at each crossing is Differential spectrum is Allowing for propagation matches observed spectrum

6 Cosmic ray wanders around shock -scattered by magnetic field High velocity plasma Low velocity plasma B2B2 B1B1 CR track Due to scattering, CR recrosses shock many times

7 ‘Bohm diffusion’ rgrg Mean free path cr ~ r g (proportional to 1/B) Requires disordered magnetic field:  B/B ~ 1 D Bohm = cr g /3

8 L= r g c /3v shock CR distribution near shock shock downstreamupstream Exponential dist n Want small r g (large B) for rapid acceleration to high energy Balance between advection and ‘Bohm’ diffusion ( cr = r g )

9 Scaleheight must be less than SNR radius L R shock CR pre-cursor Rv shock B must exceed certain value Need L<R L=(c/3v shock ) cr (c/3v shock ) cr < R cr =r g, (proportional to 1/B)

10 Condition on BvR Get original version (Hillas, 1984)

11 Cosmic Ray spectrum arriving at earth Mainly protons

12 Reducing the CR mean free path Magnetic field amplification

13 CR/Alfven wave interaction (conventional theory) If CR gyration length matches Alfven wavelength CR scattered strongly by waves Waves excited by CR B CR

14 Currents driving Alfven waves B CR dominates in conventional theory dominates when CR current is large

15 k in units of r g -1  in units of v S 2 /cr g For SNR conditions, instability strongly driven Dispersion relation Re(  ) Im(  ) kr g =1

16 Growth time of fastest growing mode Uncertain efficiency factor SNR expand rapidly for ~1000 yrs Acceleration favoured by high velocity and high density Look to very young SNR for high energy CR eg SN1993J in M81 (Bartel et al, 2002) After 1 year: v s =1.5x10 7 ms -1 n e ~10 6 cm -3 After 9 years: v s =0.9x10 7 ms -1 n e ~10 4 cm -3

17 j cr j thermal j thermal = -j cr j thermal x B causes helix expand extends field lines increases B Instability mechanism helical field line

18 MHD simulations show magnetic field amplification Development of previous modelling, Lucek & Bell (2000)

19 t=0

20 t=6.4t=9.5 t=12.4t=16.8

21

22 Evolution of magnetic field Magnetic field (log) time linearnon-linear rms field grows 30x max. field grows 100x Saturation magnetic field proportional to  1/2 v shock 3/2

23 k in units of r g -1  in units of v S 2 /cr g For SNR conditions, instability strongly driven Dispersion relation Re(  ) Im(  ) kr g =1

24 CR collimate into Filaments and Beams

25 Filamentation & self-focussing proton beam j velocity v beam B

26 MHD response to beam – mean |B| along line of sight z x t=2 t=6 t=4 t=8 Current, j

27 B (0.71,1.32)  (0.76,1.17) Slices of B and  in z at t=2 Magnetic field Density

28 B (0.40,2.61)  (0.54,1.59) Slices of B and  in z at t=4 Magnetic field Density

29 B (0.11,8.53)  (0.03,4.13) Slices of B and  in z at t=6 Low density & low B in filament Magnetic fieldDensity

30 B (0.,8.59)  (0.,4.51) Slices of B and  in z at t=8 Magnetic field Density

31 MHD response to beam – mean |B| along line of sight z x t=2 t=6 t=4 t=8 Current, j

32 Filamentation & self-focussing proton beam j velocity v beam E=-uxB B R Energy conservation Magnetic field growth Ideal for focussing CR into beam (focus CR, evacuates plasma) E=0

33 Power carried by filament/beam Alfven current: Beam radius = Larmor radius Power in individual filament/beam W =10 15 eV1.7x10 28 W = 3x10 -12 M o c 2 yr -1 =10 21 eV 1.7x10 40 W = 3 M o c 2 yr -1

34 Some questions: future directions

35 Acceleration requires large BvR magnetic field velocity size B increases with energy density  v 2 Puts emphasis on v and  For >10 15 eV, look at high density, high velocity objects: young SNR expanding into dense medium supernovae AGN A revised perspective? Could jets be driven by high energy CR?

36 Limits on shock acceleration at high density p-p loss time:  pp ~ 3x10 -9  gm/cc -1 sec Max CR energy:  ~ 25  gm/cc -1 B MG (v shock /c) 2 GeV p-p Loss length: pp ~ 0.8  gm/cc -1 m (Aharonian, 2004) p-p loss limit Can CR escape dense plasma? Other (larger?) losses

37 a natural explanation for CR Recent theory: 1) removes doubts about acceleration to the knee 2) acceleration beyond knee a possibility 3) directs attention to young SNR 4) filament/beaming intriguing 5) application to accretion systems/compact objects Shock acceleration Lucek & Bell, MNRAS 314, 65 (2000) Bell, MNRAS 353, 550 (2004) Bell, MNRAS in press (2005)

38 Cassiopeia A (Chandra)

39 j cr j thermal j thermal = -j cr j thermal x B causes helix expand extends field lines increases B Instability mechanism helical field line


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