ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Cosmic-ray (CR) sources temporarily enhance the relativistic particle density in their vicinity over the background distribution accumulated from the Galaxy-wide past injection activity and propagation. If individual sources are close enough to the solar system, their localised enhancements may present as features in the measured spectra of the CRs and in the associated secondary electromagnetic emissions. Large scale loop like structures visible in the radio sky are possible signatures of such nearby CR sources. If so, these loops may also have counterparts in the high-latitude $gamma$-ray sky. Using $sim$10 years of data from the Fermi Large Area Telescope, applying Bayesian analysis including Gaussian Processes, we search for extended enhanced emission associated with putative nearby CR sources in the energy range from 1 GeV to 1 TeV for the sky region $|b| > 30^circ$. We carefully control the systematic uncertainty due to imperfect knowledge of the interstellar gas distribution. Radio Loop~IV is identified for the first time as a $gamma$-ray emitter and we also find significant emission from Loop~I. Strong evidence is found for asymmetric features about the Galactic $l = 0^circ$ meridian that may be associated with parts of the so-called Fermi Bubbles, and some evidence is also found for $gamma$-ray emission from other radio loops. Implications for the CRs producing the features and possible locations of the sources of the emissions are discussed.
The highest energy cosmic rays could be produced by drifts in magnetized, cylindrically collimated, sheared jets of powerful active galaxies (i.e. FR II radiogalaxies; radio loud quasars and high power BL Lacs). We show that in such scenarios proton
In this work the efficiency of particle acceleration at the forward shock right after the SN outburst for the particular case of the well-known SN 1993J is analyzed. Plasma instabilities driven by the energetic particles accelerated at the shock fron
The distribution of cosmic rays in the Galaxy at energies above few TeVs is still uncertain and this affects the expectations for the diffuse gamma flux produced by hadronic interactions of cosmic rays with the interstellar gas. We show that the TeV
Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) have been proposed as a leading candidate for acceleration of ultra high-energy cosmic rays, which would be accompanied by emission of TeV neutrinos produced in proton-photon interactions during acceleration in the GRB firebal
We present a search for high-energy $gamma$-ray emission from 566 Active Galactic Nuclei at redshift $z > 0.2$, from the 2WHSP catalog of high-synchrotron peaked BL Lac objects with eight years of Fermi-LAT data. We focus on a redshift range where el