The HAWC Collaboration has reported the detection of an extended γ-ray emission around the Geminga and Monogem pulsars of a few degree extension. Very recently, the LHAASO Collaboration released also the data for an extended γ-ray emission around the pulsar PSR J0622+3749. This flux can be explained with electrons and positrons injected from these sources and their inverse Compton scattering on the interstellar radiation fields. So far the size of such γ-ray halos has been interpreted as the result of the diffusion coefficient around the sources being about 2 orders of magnitude smaller than the average in the Galaxy. However, this conclusion is driven by the assumption that particles propagate diffusively right away after the injection without taking into account the ballistic propagation. The propagation of cosmic-ray leptons in the proximity of the Geminga, Monogem and PSR J0622+3749 pulsars is examined here considering the transition from the quasiballistic, valid for the most recently injected particles, to the diffusive transport regime. For typical interstellar values of the diffusion coefficient, the quasiballistic regime dominates the lepton distribution up to distances of a few tens of parsec from the pulsar for particle energies above ∼10 TeV. In this regime the resulting γ-ray source tends to be rather compact, despite particles traveling a long distance. Indeed, for larger values of the diffusion coefficient, particles propagate ballistically up to larger distances with the result of a more pointlike γ-ray source. When such transition is taken into account, a good fit to the HAWC and LHAASO γ-ray data around Geminga, Monogem and PSR J0622+3749 is obtained without the need to invoke a strong suppression of the diffusion coefficient.

Do the Geminga, Monogem and PSR J0622+3749 γ -ray halos imply slow diffusion around pulsars?

Recchia S.;Orusa L.;Donato F.;
2021-01-01

Abstract

The HAWC Collaboration has reported the detection of an extended γ-ray emission around the Geminga and Monogem pulsars of a few degree extension. Very recently, the LHAASO Collaboration released also the data for an extended γ-ray emission around the pulsar PSR J0622+3749. This flux can be explained with electrons and positrons injected from these sources and their inverse Compton scattering on the interstellar radiation fields. So far the size of such γ-ray halos has been interpreted as the result of the diffusion coefficient around the sources being about 2 orders of magnitude smaller than the average in the Galaxy. However, this conclusion is driven by the assumption that particles propagate diffusively right away after the injection without taking into account the ballistic propagation. The propagation of cosmic-ray leptons in the proximity of the Geminga, Monogem and PSR J0622+3749 pulsars is examined here considering the transition from the quasiballistic, valid for the most recently injected particles, to the diffusive transport regime. For typical interstellar values of the diffusion coefficient, the quasiballistic regime dominates the lepton distribution up to distances of a few tens of parsec from the pulsar for particle energies above ∼10 TeV. In this regime the resulting γ-ray source tends to be rather compact, despite particles traveling a long distance. Indeed, for larger values of the diffusion coefficient, particles propagate ballistically up to larger distances with the result of a more pointlike γ-ray source. When such transition is taken into account, a good fit to the HAWC and LHAASO γ-ray data around Geminga, Monogem and PSR J0622+3749 is obtained without the need to invoke a strong suppression of the diffusion coefficient.
2021
104
12
123017
123026
https://arxiv.org/abs/2106.02275
Recchia S.; Di Mauro M.; Aharonian F.A.; Orusa L.; Donato F.; Gabici S.; Manconi S.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1841919
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