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The spectrum of cosmic ray protons and electrons released by supernova remnants throughout their evolution is poorly known, because of the difficulty in accounting for particle escape and confinement in the downstream of a shock front, where both adiabatic and radiative losses are present. Here we calculate the spectrum of cosmic ray protons released during the evolution of supernovae of different types, accounting for the escape from upstream and for adiabatic losses of particles advected downstream of the shock and liberated at later times. The same calculation is carried out for electrons. The magnetic field in the post-shock region is calculated by using an analytic treatment of the magnetic field amplification due to non--resonant and resonant streaming instability and their saturation. We find that when the field is the result of the growth of the cosmic-ray--driven non--resonant instability alone, the spectrum of electrons and protons released by a supernova remnant are indeed different, but such a difference becomes appreciable only at energies $gtrsim 100-1000$ GeV, while observations of the electron spectrum require such a difference to be present at energies as low as $sim 10$ GeV. An effect at such low energies requires substantial magnetic field amplification in the late stages of the supernova remnant evolution (shock velocity $ll 1000$ km/s), perhaps not due to streaming instability but hydrodynamical processes. We comment on the feasibility of such conditions and speculate on the possibility that the difference in spectral shape between electrons and protons may reflect either some unknown acceleration effect, or additional energy losses in cocoons around the sources.
Recent discovery of the X-ray neutral iron line (Fe I Kalpha at 6.40 keV) around several supernova remnants (SNRs) show that MeV cosmic-ray (CR) protons are distributed around the SNRs and are interacting with neutral gas there. We propose that these
Supernova remnants are known to accelerate cosmic rays on account of their non-thermal emission of radio waves, X-rays, and gamma rays. Although there are many models for the acceleration of cosmic rays in Supernova remnants, the escape of cosmic ray
Despite significant efforts over the last decade, the origin of the cosmic ray positron excess has still not been unambiguously established. A popular class of candidates are pulsars or pulsar wind nebulae but these cannot account for the observed ha
We discuss processes in galactic cosmic ray (GCR) acceleration sites - supernova remnants, compact associations of young massive stars, and superbubbles. Mechanisms of efficient conversion of the mechanical power of the outflows driven by supernova s
Supernova remnants (SNRs) are believed to accelerate particles up to high energies through the mechanism of diffusive shock acceleration (DSA). Except for direct plasma simulations, all modeling efforts must rely on a given form of the diffusion coef