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A possible universal origin of hadronic cosmic rays from ultrarelativistic ejecta of bipolar supernovae

✍ Scribed by R. Plaga


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
576 KB
Volume
7
Category
Article
ISSN
1384-1076

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✦ Synopsis


Based on the ''cannonball model'' for gamma-ray bursts of Dar and De Rujula, it is proposed that masses of baryonic plasma (''cannonballs''), ejected in bipolar supernova explosions in our Galaxy are the sources of hadronic Galactic cosmic rays (CRs) at all energies. The propagation of the cannonballs in the Galactic disk and halo is studied. Two mechanisms for the acceleration of the observed CRs are proposed. The first is based on ultrarelativistic shocks in the interstellar medium and 15 could accelerate the bulk of CRs up to the ''knee'' energy of 4310 eV. The second operates with second-order Fermi 53 acceleration within the cannonball. If the total initial energy of the ejected plasmoids in a SN explosion is 10 erg or higher, this second mechanism may explain the CR spectrum above the knee up to the highest observed energies. It is shown that together with plausible assumptions about CR propagation in the Galactic confinement volume, the observed spectral indices of the CR spectrum can be theoretically understood to first order. The model allows a natural understanding of various basic CR observations like the absence of the Greisen-Zatsepin cutoff, the anisotropy of arrival directions as function of energy and the small Galactocentric gradient of the CR density.