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Evidence for Cosmic-Ray Escape in the Small Magellanic Cloud using Fermi Gamma-rays

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 Added by Laura Lopez
 Publication date 2018
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Galaxy formation simulations demonstrate that cosmic-ray (CR) feedback may be important in the launching of galactic-scale winds. CR protons dominate the bulk of the CR population, yet most observational constraints of CR feedback come from synchrotron emission of CR electrons. In this paper, we present an analysis of 105 months of Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope observations of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC), with the aim of exploring CR feedback and transport in an external galaxy. We produce maps of the 2-300 GeV emission and detect statistically significant, extended emission along the Bar and the Wing, where active star formation is occurring. Gamma-ray emission is not detected above 13 GeV, and we set stringent upper-limits on the flux above this energy. We find the best fit to the gamma-ray spectrum is a single-component model with a power-law of index $Gamma=-2.11pm0.06pm0.06$ and an exponential cutoff energy of $E_{rm c} =13.1pm5.1pm1.6$ GeV. We assess the relative contribution of pulsars and CRs to the emission, and we find that pulsars may produce up to 14$^{+4}_{-2}$% of the flux above 100 MeV. Thus, we attribute most of the gamma-ray emission (based on its spectrum and morphology) to CR interactions with the ISM. We show that the gamma-ray emissivity of the SMC is five times smaller than that of the Milky Way and that the SMC is far below the calorimetric limit, where all CR protons experience pion losses. We interpret these findings as evidence that CRs are escaping the SMC via advection and diffusion.



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171 - G. Novara 2011
Many of the high mass X-ray binaries (HMXRBs) discovered in recent years in our Galaxy are characterized by a high absorption, most likely intrinsic to the system, which hampers their detection at the softest X-ray energies. We have undertaken a search for highly-absorbed X-ray sources in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) with a systematic analysis of 62 XMM-Newton SMC observations. We obtained a sample of 30 sources showing evidence for an equivalent hydrogen column density larger than 3x10^23 cm^-2. Five of these sources are clearly identified as HMXRBs: four were already known (including three X-ray pulsars) and one, XMM J005605.8-720012, reported here for the first time. For the latter, we present optical spectroscopy confirming the association with a Be star in the SMC. The other sources in our sample have optical counterparts fainter than magnitude ~16 in the V band, and many of them have possible NIR counterparts consistent with highly reddened early type stars in the SMC. While their number is broadly consistent with the expected population of background highly-absorbed active galactic nuclei, a few of them could be HMXRBs in which an early type companion is severely reddened by local material.
An accurate estimate of the interstellar gas density distribution is crucial to understanding the interstellar medium (ISM) and Galactic cosmic rays (CRs). To comprehend the ISM and CRs in a local environment, a study of the diffuse $gamma$-ray emission in a mid-latitude region of the third quadrant was performed. The $gamma$-ray data in the 0.1--25.6~GeV energy range of the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) and other interstellar gas tracers such as the HI4PI survey data and the Planck dust thermal emission model were used, and the northern and southern regions were analyzed separately. The variation of the dust emission Dem with the total neutral gas column density NH was studied in high dust-temperature areas, and the NH/Dem ratio was calibrated using $gamma$-ray data under the assumption of a uniform CR intensity in the studied regions. The measured integrated $gamma$-ray emissivities above 100~MeV are $(1.58pm0.04)times10^{-26}~mathrm{photons~s^{-1}~sr^{-1}~Hmbox{-}atom^{-1}}$ and $(1.59pm0.02)times10^{-26}~mathrm{photons~s^{-1}~sr^{-1}~Hmbox{-}atom^{-1}}$ in the northern and southern regions, respectively, supporting the existence of a uniform CR intensity in the vicinity of the solar system. While most of the gas can be interpreted to be HI with a spin temperature of $T_mathrm{S} = 125~mathrm{K}$ or higher, an area dominated by optically thick HI with $T_mathrm{S} sim 40~mathrm{K}$ was identified.
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