The contribution of winds of star clusters to the Galactic cosmic-ray population (2024)

Giada PeronUniversité de Paris, CNRS, Astroparticule et Cosmologie, F-75013 Paris, FranceMax Planck Institute für Kernphysik, Heidelberg, Germanye-mail: giada.peron@apc.in2p3.frSabrina CasanovaInstitute of Nuclear Physics, Krakow, PolandStefano GabiciUniversité de Paris, CNRS, Astroparticule et Cosmologie, F-75013 Paris, FranceVardan BaghmanyanLehrstuhl für Astronomie, Universität Würzburg, Würzburg, GermanyFelix AharonianMax Planck Institute für Kernphysik, Heidelberg, GermanyDublin Institute for Advanced Studies, Dublin, IrelandYerevan State University, 1 Alek Manukyan St, Yerevan 0025, Armenia

Cosmic rays are energetic nuclei that permeate the entire Galactic disk. Their existence requires the presence of powerful particle accelerators. While Galactic supernova explosions may supply the required energy, there is growing evidence that they cannot explain all of the observed properties of cosmic rays, such as their maximum particle energy and isotopic composition.Among Galactic objects, winds from stellar clusters meet the energetic requirement and provide a suitable environment for particle acceleration. The recent detection of some of these objects in γ𝛾\gamma rays confirms that they indeed harbor high-energy particles.However, as most supernovae explode inside stellar clusters, it is difficult to distinguish the contribution of winds to particle acceleration. Here we report the detection of young star clusters in the nearby Vela molecular ridge star forming region. The young age of the systems guarantees an unbiased estimate of the stellar CR luminosity free from any supernova or pulsar contamination and allows us to draw conclusions on the acceleration efficiency and the total power supplied by these objects.We demonstrate that much more than 1% of the wind mechanical power is converted into CRs and consequently conclude that a small but non-negligible fraction 110%similar-toabsent1percent10\sim 1-10\% of the CR population is contributed by stellar clusters.

Clusters of massive stars are thought to be powerful particle accelerators. Their energy supply resides in the winds blown by member stars. For our Galaxy the total mechanical power injected by winds of stellar clusters (SCs) has been estimated to be approximately 1041superscript104110^{41} erg s-1, which is just a factor of a few smaller than the power supplied by supernova (SN) explosions[1].Such a large amount of energy may support a sizeable fraction of the 7×1040similar-toabsent7superscript1040\sim 7\times 10^{40} erg s-1 luminosity of Galactic cosmic rays (GCRs) [2, 3]. Moreover, allowing particle acceleration in stellar environment could explain the anomalous excess in the isotopic ratio XCR=22superscript22subscript𝑋𝐶𝑅absentX_{CR}=^{22}Ne/20Ne0.317similar-toabsent0.317\sim 0.317 observed in GCRs (the cosmic value being XS0.0735similar-tosubscript𝑋𝑆0.0735X_{S}\sim 0.0735)[4, 5, 6].

γ𝛾\gamma-ray observations of several SCs from GeV to PeV energies[7, 8, 9] confirmed that these objects are indeed effective particle accelerators[10, 11, 12, 13].However, the fraction of wind mechanical energy that is converted into GCRs is still unconstrained.This is because the γ𝛾\gamma-ray emitting clusters detected so far reside in complex regions, where several potential particle accelerators overlap: either because some SN already exploded in the cluster (this is the case for Westerlund 1[14] and Cygnus OB2[15]) or because of the superposition with other potential CR sources along the line of sight (as in the case of Westerlund 2 [16]).This prevents an observational estimate of the contribution of SC winds to the population of GCRs.

This problem can be solved by targeting very young SCs, i.e., younger than the typical age when SN explosions begin to occur[17]. Massive stars end their life with a SN explosion, and their lifetime decreases with the stellar mass ranging from similar-to\sim3 Myr for the most massive stars, 120similar-toabsent120\sim 120 M, to 10 Myr for the least-massive SN progenitors, 10similar-toabsent10\sim 10 M [18].Earlier searches in this direction resulted in upper limits on the gamma-ray flux for a handful of young star clusters [17].

Very young SCs are expected to be still embedded in the gas cocoon out of which they formed and where they spend 10%-20% of their main-sequence lifetime [19]. Even though the cocoon is optically thick to the light of the stars, the presence of embedded young SCs is revealed by the near-infrared emission that dust re-emits after being heated by the strong UV radiation of massive stars.Far infrared emission (from similar-to\sim 10 μ𝜇\mum to similar-to\sim 100 μ𝜇\mum ) acts as a tracer of early type (O/B) stars[19]. It has been demonstrated that using FIR luminosity is equivalent as using radio to identify the regions of ionized gas (Hii region) around massive stars [20]. That allowed the identification of more than 8000 Hii regions in the Galaxy using their 22-μ𝜇\mum emission [21].Among these, several embedded young massive SCs are found in the near (similar-to\sim1-2kpc) Vela molecular cloud ridge (VMR) from which, making use of Fermi-LAT observations, we extracted the γ𝛾\gamma-ray spectrum and constrained the CR luminosity (see Table1). For 3 of such SCs in the VMR we report a firm detection of emission that we can relate to stellar winds due to the superposition of the high-energy and infrared emission. Their extracted energy spectra are shown in Fig. 2. All the targeted clusters are embedded in a Hii region, clearly identified both at IR, by the WISE-22 μ𝜇\mum survey [21], and in optical by observing their characteristic Hα𝛼\alpha emission [22].This further confirms that we are dealing with very massive stars.The typical age of embedded clusters is of the order of less-than-or-similar-to\lesssim 1 Myr, allowing us to conclude that no SN event happened in these regions yet. The known supernova remnants in the region, Vela Y and Vela Z (also known as Vela Junior) are found in the foreground of the VMR and therefore can be easily masked to avoid any contamination to the γ𝛾\gamma-ray signal.Superposition of other possible accelerators is also excluded as we include in the sample only clusters which are not associated with any identified GeV source from the 4FGL Fermi-LAT (Large Area Telescope) catalog [23], nor with any pulsar from the ATNF (Australian Telescope National Facility) catalog [24]. We note, instead, that at the location of all of the considered SCs, unidentified Fermi-LAT sources are present and we suggest an association with the clusters.Even though no firm identification was proposed so far for these four Fermi-LAT sources, the association we put forward is consistent with tentative classifications reported in earlier works[25].

The GeV energy band is the optimal range to investigate the global energetic of CR particles, as in that part of the spectrum resides the bulk of their power.We analyzed data accumulated during 13 years by the Fermi-LAT in the energy interval between 500 MeV and 1 TeV as described in detail in the Methods section. In this energy range, the LAT point spread function ranges from 1 to 0.15 and its sensitivity for a 10-year long exposure is 1012similar-toabsentsuperscript1012\sim 10^{-12} erg cm-2 s-1.We detected γ𝛾\gamma-ray emission from the direction of the SCs: figures1 and 2 show the results of our analysis of the γ𝛾\gamma-ray observations carried out in the entire VMR region. Since the targeted objects are low-surface-brightness sources, we tested the stability of the results assuming three different models for the diffuse background emission: the details are reported in the Methods section where we show that the choice of the background model does not affect the detection, nor the spectral shape of the targeted sources, but only slightly (a factor 1.5 at most) the overall flux. We fitted the position and the extension of the sources. The results of the morphology tests are presented in Table 2.In a scenario where stars both heat the dust grains and accelerate CRs we expect a morphological similarity between the gamma-ray and the IR emitting regions. We therefore tested the morphology of the analyzed sources. We found a significant extension (σext>5subscript𝜎𝑒𝑥𝑡5\sigma_{ext}>5) only for the source RCW38, that is found to be comparable with the extension of the HII region. For the others, the extension significance is lower (σext3similar-tosubscript𝜎𝑒𝑥𝑡3\sigma_{ext}\sim 3), due to the limited angular resolution of Fermi-LAT, but the extension fit still converges to values similar to the extension of the Hii regions (see Table 2). In the latter cases, the extension should be regarded as an upper limit to the real extension. The centroid, instead in all cases is found to compare well with the centroid of the corresponding HII regions. The chances for random superposition are low, and are evaluated in the Methods.

The most prominent region in γ𝛾\gamma rays corresponds to the location of RCW 38, which is detected with a statistical significance of σ21similar-to𝜎21\sigma\sim 21.RCW 38 is an ultra-compact Hii region that contains a young (similar-to\sim0.5 Myr) stellar cluster with more than 1000 stars, of which at least 30 early type stars are concentrated in a radius of similar-to\sim 0.5 pc [26, 27].RCW 38 is embedded in the VelaB complex, the farthest region within the VMR. A recent precise determination of its distance has been obtained using Gaia extinction data that located RCW 38 at approximately 1600 pc from us [28]. The energy spectrum of RCW 38 is modeled as a power law, N0(E/E0)αsubscript𝑁0superscript𝐸subscript𝐸0𝛼{N_{0}(E/E_{0})^{\alpha}} ,with flux normalization N0=3.9±0.2subscript𝑁0plus-or-minus3.90.2N_{0}=3.9\pm 0.2 MeV-1 cm-2 s-1 at E0subscript𝐸0E_{0}=1 GeV and index αγ=2.56±0.05subscript𝛼𝛾plus-or-minus2.560.05\alpha_{\gamma}={-2.56\pm 0.05}. Its luminosity above 1 GeV is Lγ(>1GeV)annotatedsubscript𝐿𝛾absent1GeVL_{\gamma}(>1\leavevmode\nobreak\ \mathrm{GeV})=5×1033absentsuperscript1033\times 10^{33}ergs-1 , assuming a distance of 1600 pc.The second brightest source in our sample coincides with RCW 36, embedded in the Vela C region, located 900 pc from us [28]. This region is slightly less luminous ( N0=3.8subscript𝑁03.8N_{0}=3.8 MeV-1 cm-2 s-1 , Lγ(>1GeV)annotatedsubscript𝐿𝛾absent1GeVL_{\gamma}(>1\leavevmode\nobreak\ \mathrm{GeV})= 1.5 ×1033absentsuperscript1033\times 10^{33} erg s-1, detected at σ16similar-to𝜎16\sigma\sim 16) and slightly steeper (αγ=2.72±0.06subscript𝛼𝛾plus-or-minus2.720.06\alpha_{\gamma}={-2.72\pm 0.06}), compared to RCW 38. Similarly to RCW 38, also RCW 36 is ionized by a young (similar-to\sim 1 Myr) and compact (similar-to\sim 0.5 pc) stellar cluster [29].Finally, another statistically significant (σ𝜎\sigma>5) source is found to be coincident with the young star cluster RCW 32, in the Vela D region, localized at a similar distance than Vela C, 900similar-toabsent900\sim 900pc. The age of the RCW 32 is somewhat uncertain because the cluster seems to host two different populations of stars: one made of very massive stars at the core of the cluster with an age of less-than-or-similar-to\lesssim 2 Myr, and a population of low-mass stars that formed earlier (5–13 Myr) [30]. However, this fact should not cause concern, as older low-mass stars do not end up in a SN explosion.

Other SCs are located in the VMR (see Table 2). We report a hint of γ𝛾\gamma-ray emission (σ5greater-than-or-equivalent-to𝜎5\sigma\gtrsim 5) from RCW 35, RCW 37, RCW 40, and RCW 41. Their morphology and spectra have larger uncertainties and therefore we prefer to exclude them from the discussion, but their spectral energy distributions are reported in the Methods section. Gamma ray emission in proximity of IRS 31 is also detected at a 11 σ𝜎\sigma level. The latter source is not included in the RCW catalog of Hα𝛼\alpha regions [22] but it is a well known IR source[31] coinciding with the WISE region G264.124+01.926. Most likely, it belongs to the population of radio-quiet HII regions[21] which, due to their small size are believed to be optically thick to recombination lines (at both optical and radio frequencies), suggesting that also in this case the γ𝛾\gamma-ray emission could be connected to massive stars. Even if the mass in the region of IRS 31 is quite uncertain (see Table 3), this source emerges above the tested backgrounds, but with a reduced significance when changing the background and therefore we ignore it in the discussion.A significant γ𝛾\gamma-ray source with extension and position matching RCW 27 is also detected. However, the superposition with a pulsar makes it hard to associate the γ𝛾\gamma-ray emission to the embedded stars, and therefore we leave this source for a more detailed investigation. No significant emission emerged from RCW 34, this could be due to the vicinity of the source to RCW 36 and IRS 31, but also to its slightly larger distance, 2.5±0.2similar-toabsentplus-or-minus2.50.2\sim 2.5\pm 0.2 kpc [32]

The detection of these three young SCs in γ𝛾\gamma-rays is unique, having no contamination from other sources and a sufficiently precise estimate of their distance and age. This allows us to estimate the fraction of the mechanical power of stellar winds that is converted into CRs.To estimate the mechanical power of winds in a cluster, Lsubscript𝐿L_{*}, we assume that the fitted size of the γ𝛾\gamma-ray source corresponds to the radius R𝑅R of the bubble inflated in the interstellar medium by the SC winds. The evolution of the radius of the bubble with the age of the SC, t𝑡t, follows the well known relation[33] R(ξL/n)1/5t3/5similar-to𝑅superscript𝜉subscript𝐿𝑛15superscript𝑡35R\sim(\xi L_{*}/n)^{1/5}t^{3/5}, where n𝑛n is the density of the ambient gas, that can be estimated from gas column density measurements performed by making use of tracers such as CO lines and dust emission (see Methods section).More precisely, the mass determined in this way is assumed to be concentrated within spherical volume of radius equal to R𝑅R, i.e., the measured extension of each γ𝛾\gamma-ray source. The depth of the molecular gas along the line-of-sight is certainly larger than R𝑅R, but the dust profiles obtained by Gaia in this region puts an upper limit on the gas extent in Vela to similar-to\sim 100 pc [34]. What we obtain in this way is an upper limit on the gas density, that can be converted into an upper limit for the wind mechanical power: L<R5t3n/ξsubscript𝐿superscript𝑅5superscript𝑡3𝑛𝜉L_{*}<R^{5}t^{-3}n/\xi.The parameter ξ<1𝜉1\xi<1 accounts for the fact that, due to radiative losses, only a fraction of the mechanical energy Lsubscript𝐿L_{*} is actually used to create the bubble [35]. We constrain the value of ξ𝜉\xi to match the mechanical luminosity (M˙v2˙𝑀superscript𝑣2\dot{M}v^{2}/2) estimated for RCW38, for which a mass-loss rate of M˙=2×104˙𝑀2superscript104\dot{M}=2\times 10^{-4} M, and an average wind velocity 1000 km s-1 are estimated [36] and find ξ=0.07𝜉0.07\xi=0.07, which is consistent with the values found in hydro-dynamical simulations of very young SCs embedded in a dense (similar-to\sim 1000 cm-3) medium [35].

The mechanical luminosity obtained in this way is compared to the observed CR luminosity, LCRsubscript𝐿𝐶𝑅L_{CR}, derived from γ𝛾\gamma-ray observations, to compute the acceleration efficiency, η=LCR/L𝜂subscript𝐿𝐶𝑅subscript𝐿\eta=L_{CR}/L_{*}.We consider a scenario where the observed γ𝛾\gamma-rays are the result of the decay of neutral pions which are in turn generated in the interactions of accelerated CR nuclei with the ambient gas. We consider leptonic processes due to CR electrons either scattering off the soft ambient photons (inverse Compton scattering) or due to bremsstrahlung less plausible (see extended discussion in the Methods section). Synchrotron losses largely dominate in these systems, given the enhanced magnetic field compared to the average in the ISM: for RCW 38 estimations suggest a value of similar-to\sim 40 μ𝜇\muG [37], that could be even larger in similar systems[38]. In such a large magnetic field it is hard to explain the observed spectral points up to 100 GeV with inverse Compton (IC) scattering or bremmstrahlung, as high energy electrons would quickly cool by emitting synchrotron photons in the radio domain[39].On the other hand, the dense gas that constitutes the VMR nsimilar-to𝑛absentn\sim 1000 cm-3 provides thick target for CR hadronic interactions.

Starting from the observed γ𝛾\gamma-ray spectra (Fig.2), we derived the spectra of the parent CR protons using the naima software package [40].Then, from the derived CR spectral distribution we evaluated the CR luminosity as: LCRWp/tppsubscript𝐿𝐶𝑅subscript𝑊𝑝subscript𝑡𝑝𝑝L_{CR}\approx{W_{p}}/{t_{pp}}, where Wpsubscript𝑊𝑝W_{p} is the total CR proton energy stored within the SC and tppsubscript𝑡𝑝𝑝t_{pp} is the proton-proton interaction timescale [41].Such an estimate of the CR luminosity is based on a calorimetric assumption: all CRs accelerated at the SC lose all their energy due to interactions with the ambient gas over a time which is shorter than both the escape time of CRs from the region and the age of the SC. While we know the age (1013similar-toabsentsuperscript1013\sim 10^{13} s), the escape time can be computed from the observed γ𝛾\gamma-ray and CR luminosity as a function of η𝜂\eta, the fraction of SC mechanical energy that goes into CRs (the derivation is reported in Methods section). For RCW 38 the escape time for 1-GeV particles results tesc=7.6×1011η1(n/1000cm3)1ssubscript𝑡𝑒𝑠𝑐7.6superscript1011superscript𝜂1superscript𝑛1000superscriptcm31st_{esc}=7.6\times 10^{11}\eta^{-1}({n}/{1000\leavevmode\nobreak\ \mathrm{cm^{-3}}})^{-1}\leavevmode\nobreak\ \mathrm{s} which is always smaller than the proton-proton interaction timescale tpp=1.6×1012(n/1000cm3)1ssubscript𝑡𝑝𝑝1.6superscript1012superscript𝑛1000superscriptcm31st_{pp}=1.6\times 10^{12}({n}/{1000\leavevmode\nobreak\ \mathrm{cm^{-3}}})^{-1}\leavevmode\nobreak\ \mathrm{s} for η>0.005𝜂0.005\eta>0.005. Similarly, the diffusion coefficient results (see Methods section) D2×1028cm2s1η(E/1GeV)1/3(n/1000cm3)similar-to𝐷2superscript1028superscriptcm2superscripts1𝜂superscript𝐸1GeV13𝑛1000superscriptcm3D\sim 2\times 10^{28}\leavevmode\nobreak\ \mathrm{cm^{2}s^{-1}}\eta\leavevmode\nobreak\ (E/1\leavevmode\nobreak\ \mathrm{GeV})^{1/3}({n}/{1000\leavevmode\nobreak\ \mathrm{cm^{-3}}}). Thus, even if a strong suppression of D𝐷D must take place in these systems, compared to the average Galactic value, DISM(1GeV)1028cm2s1similar-tosubscript𝐷𝐼𝑆𝑀1GeVsuperscript1028superscriptcm2superscripts1D_{ISM}(1\leavevmode\nobreak\ \mathrm{GeV})\sim 10^{28}\leavevmode\nobreak\ \mathrm{cm^{2}s^{-1}}, we expect that CRs are efficiently escaping from the systems, meaning that the actual CR luminosity is much higher than the estimations obtained in the calorimetric hypothesis. Despite the large target gas density, we don’t see γ𝛾\gamma-ray emission in the surroundings of the targeted SCs. However, since the SCs themselves have a low surface brightness, on a comparable level to the diffuse emission, it is also possible that escaped particles are too diluted to cause a detectable enhancement. The only hint comes from a gas region near RCW36, approximately at l,b266,0.9formulae-sequencesimilar-to𝑙𝑏superscript266superscript0.9l,b\sim 266^{\circ},0.9^{\circ}, but the uncertainties on its mass prevent us from a firm conclusion on its nature (Figure 1).

The CR luminosity calculated in the calorimetric assumption allows us to derive a strict lower limit for LCRsubscript𝐿𝐶𝑅L_{CR}, as it is based on the most effective conversion of CR energy into γ𝛾\gamma-ray photons. It follows that our estimate of η=LCR/L𝜂subscript𝐿𝐶𝑅subscript𝐿\eta=L_{CR}/L_{*}, based on a lower limit for LCRsubscript𝐿𝐶𝑅L_{CR} and on a upper limit for Lsubscript𝐿L_{*}, is a strict lower limit for the CR acceleration efficiency (see Table1).The values that we obtain are consistent with the upper limits for η𝜂\eta obtained from the non-detection of a number of embedded star clusters [17].

Taking the average value of ηmin0.5subscript𝜂𝑚𝑖𝑛0.5{\eta}_{min}\approx 0.5% as representative of all SCs in the Galaxy, stellar winds would accelerate CRs at a rate at least equal to 5×10385superscript10385\times 10^{38} erg s-1, corresponding to the 0.7% of the total energy supply of GCRs. Remembering that ηminsubscript𝜂𝑚𝑖𝑛\eta_{min} is a strict lower limit of the CR acceleration efficiency, we conclude that SCs provide a sizable fraction, ϵwmuch-greater-thansubscriptitalic-ϵ𝑤absent\epsilon_{w}\gg 1%, of the total power of GCRs.

Remarkably, the lower-bound value for ϵw=1subscriptitalic-ϵ𝑤1\epsilon_{w}=1% that we obtained from γ𝛾\gamma-ray observations implies that an excess in the 22Ne/20Ne ratio in CRs must exist. Applying this value, in fact, we find a lower limit for the isotopic ratio XCRϵwXw+(1ϵw)XS=0.09>Xssimilar-tosubscript𝑋𝐶𝑅subscriptitalic-ϵ𝑤subscript𝑋𝑤1subscriptitalic-ϵ𝑤subscript𝑋𝑆0.09subscript𝑋𝑠X_{CR}\sim\epsilon_{w}X_{w}+(1-\epsilon_{w})X_{S}=0.09>X_{s}, where Xw1.56similar-tosubscript𝑋𝑤1.56X_{w}\sim 1.56 is the estimated value for the isotopic ratio in the accelerated stellar wind material[42]. This argument can be reversed to say that, in order to reproduce the observed CR isotopic ratio XCR0.317similar-tosubscript𝑋𝐶𝑅0.317X_{CR}\sim 0.317, the fraction of GCR particles originating from accelerated wind material has to be ϵw(XCRXS)/(XwXS)16similar-tosubscriptitalic-ϵ𝑤subscript𝑋𝐶𝑅subscript𝑋𝑆subscript𝑋𝑤subscript𝑋𝑆similar-to16\epsilon_{w}\sim(X_{CR}-X_{S})/(X_{w}-X_{S})\sim 16%.To guarantee that this value is not overshoot, a maximum fraction ηmaxϵwLtot,CR/Ltot,10%similar-tosubscript𝜂𝑚𝑎𝑥subscriptitalic-ϵ𝑤subscript𝐿𝑡𝑜𝑡𝐶𝑅subscript𝐿𝑡𝑜𝑡similar-topercent10\eta_{max}\sim\epsilon_{w}\leavevmode\nobreak\ L_{tot,CR}/L_{tot,*}\sim 10\% of the mechanical energy of the stars may be released in the form of CR nuclei. Our results indicate that young SCs are non-negligible contributors of galactic CRs and their ability to produce high-energy particles must not be disregarded, especially for their close interconnection to the interstellar medium.

SourcetSCsubscript𝑡𝑆𝐶t_{SC}nISMsubscript𝑛𝐼𝑆𝑀n_{ISM} (gas/dust)LγPLsubscriptsuperscript𝐿𝑃𝐿𝛾L^{PL}_{\gamma}(>1 GeV)N0subscript𝑁0N_{0}αγPLsubscriptsuperscript𝛼𝑃𝐿𝛾\alpha^{PL}_{\gamma}Rγsubscript𝑅𝛾R_{\gamma}LCR,minsubscript𝐿𝐶𝑅𝑚𝑖𝑛L_{CR,min}(>0.1 GeV)ηminsubscript𝜂𝑚𝑖𝑛\eta_{min}
[Myr][103superscript10310^{3} cm-3][1033 erg s-1][10-12 MeV cm-2 s-1][][1034 erg s-1][%]
RCW3221.9 /2.40.81.7 ±plus-or-minus\pm 0.2-2.46 ±plus-or-minus\pm 0.080.260.40.8/0.7
RCW361.12.6/2.91.53.8 ±plus-or-minus\pm 0.2-2.72 ±plus-or-minus\pm 0.060.271.20.8 /0.7
RCW380.52.1 /1.94.93.9 ±plus-or-minus\pm 0.2-2.56 ±plus-or-minus\pm 0.060.213.20.004/0.004
The contribution of winds of star clusters to the Galactic cosmic-ray population (1)
The contribution of winds of star clusters to the Galactic cosmic-ray population (2)

About this manuscript

This version of the manuscript has been accepted for publication. The accepted manuscript is defined as the version of a manuscript accepted for publication after peer review, but does not reflect post-acceptance improvements, or any corrections, retractions, or other post-publication editorial actions. The Version of Record is available online at: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-023-02168-6.

Contribution

G.P lead the data analysis, proposed the interpretation and produced the manuscript and its figures. S.C. proposed the target region as a case study. V.B. cross-checked the Fermi-LAT analysis. G.P, S.G., S.C. and F.A. gave significant inputs on data interpretation. All authors participated in the discussions and editing of the paper.

Data availability

The authors made use of publicly available data that can be retrieved at https://fermi.gsfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/ssc/LAT/LATDataQuery.cgi

Code availability

The authors made use of publicly available analysis softwares. In particular fermipy v.1.0.2 available at https://github.com/fermiPy/fermipy/blob/master/docs/index.rst, naima availble at https://github.com/zblz/naima.

Competing interest

The authors declare no competing interests.

Acknowledgment

The authors would like to acknowledge Prof. Dr. J. Hinton, Dr. E. Amato, Dr. G. Morlino, Dr. R. Tuffs, and Dr. M. Lemoine-Goumard for the suggestions and discussion. G. P. and S. G. are supported by Agence Nationale de la Recherche (grant ANR-21-CE31-0028). S. C. acknowledges support from the Polish Science Centre grant DEC-2017/27/B/ST9/02272.

Methods

Analysis summary

We analyzed more than 13 years of Fermi-LAT PASS8 data, collected between August 8th 2009 (MET 239557417) and December 14th 2021 (MET 632287927). We selected source class events (evclass=128) reconstructed both at the front and back of the detector (evtype=3), imposed data quality DATA_QUAL==1 && LAT_CONFIG==1 and a maximum zenith angle of 90, and enabled the energy dispersion evaluation (edisp=True).Due to the large extension of the VMR, we chose a region of interest 17-wide centered at (l,b)=(265.5,0)𝑙𝑏superscript265.50(l,b)=(265.5,0)^{\circ}. In the same region of interest we can find the Vela Junior supernova remnant (4FGL J0851.9-4620e), partially overlapping the cloud complex and the Vela X pulsar (4FGL J0835.3-4510) with its nebula (4FGL J0834.3-4542e). We included in the analysis all the sources from the 4FGL catalog[23] and the standard galactic (gll_iem_v07.fits) and extragalactic (iso_P8R3_SOURCE_V3_v1.txt) background provided by the Fermi-LAT collaboration. We then tested our detection with different galactic backgrounds based on the map of CO, Hi and dust, as explained in the next section.

We ran the analysis over the energy range 500 MeV–1 TeV. To investigate the morphology of the sources in the region, we restricted our analysis to data with energy higher than 3 GeV. In this energy range, the Fermi-LAT point spread function (0.2similar-toabsentsuperscript0.2\sim 0.2^{\circ}) is much better than at lower energies, where it could be as large as 1. We deleted from the model all 4FGL sources which spatially coincided with known Hii regions, as reported in Table 2 and we re-modeled the emission in this regions. In particular, we fitted the position and the extension of these sources using the extension routine of the fermipy software package. Results are collected in Table 2: we include the best-fit position and extension and their relative uncertainties, along with the TSext𝑇subscript𝑆𝑒𝑥𝑡TS_{ext} value which gives the significance of the extended source hypothesis over the point-like hypothesis, namely TSext=2log(Lext/Lps)𝑇subscript𝑆𝑒𝑥𝑡2subscript𝐿𝑒𝑥𝑡subscript𝐿𝑝𝑠TS_{ext}=2\log(L_{ext}/L_{ps}), where Lext,pssubscript𝐿𝑒𝑥𝑡𝑝𝑠L_{ext,ps} [47] are the maximum likelihood of the extended and point-like model respectively. Although we cannot claim that all the investigated sources are extended, as they are conventionally defined extended if TSext>16𝑇subscript𝑆𝑒𝑥𝑡16TS_{ext}>16 [48], we see that the fitted values well agrees with the extension of the corresponding Hii regions. We then used the optimized morphology, obtained at high energies, to extract the spectrum in the whole considered energy range. spectral index where the extension hypothesis is indistinguishable from the point-like hypothesis, the fitted extension can be regarded as an upper limit to the real extension. In the table, we also report the significance of the sources from our analysis, determined in the range 500 MeV-1 TeV as σ=2ln(L0/L1)𝜎2𝑙𝑛subscript𝐿0subscript𝐿1\sigma=\sqrt{-2ln(L_{0}/L_{1})} , where L1subscript𝐿1L_{1} and L0subscript𝐿0L_{0} are the value of maximum likelihood obtained for a model with or without the considered source [49]. We checked that the total flux and significance did not depend on the uncertainties of the response functions. These can be accounted for by calculating the weighted likelihood [50].

NameWISE name4FGL source (type)Fitted position (l,b)𝑙𝑏(l,b)WISE sizeSize (TSext)σ𝜎\sigma
[][][]
RCW 27G259.771+00.541J0838.4-3952 (psr)259.68±0.10, 0.76±0.090.9330.82 111This value was computed in the energy range 500 MeV-1 TeV, because the source is not significant at higher energeies.0.08+0.09subscriptsuperscriptabsent0.090.08{}^{+0.09}_{-0.08} ( 46.4)9.01
RCW 32G261.515+00.984J0844.9-4117 (unid)261.51±0.06, 0.95±0.080.4400.260.05+0.06subscriptsuperscriptabsent0.060.05{}^{+0.06}_{-0.05} (10.7)7.48
RCW 34G264.343+01.450.108
RCW35G264.681+00.272J0853.1-4407 (unid)264.86±0.08, -0.01±0.120.155n.c.6.73
G264.220+00.2160.5
RCW 36G265.151+01.454J0859.3-4342 (unid)265.09±0.05, 1.36±0.040.2240.270.06+0.07subscriptsuperscriptabsent0.070.06{}^{+0.07}_{-0.06} (10.8)16.14
RCW 37J0900.2-4608 (unid)266.97 ±0.04, 0.01 ±0.05point-like4.03
RCW 38G267.935-01.075J0859.2-4729 (unid)267.91 ±0.03,-1.03±0.030.1550.210.04+0.04subscriptsuperscriptabsent0.040.04{}^{+0.04}_{-0.04} (26.781)21.04
RCW 40G269.174-01.436268.57±0.06, -0.73±0.040.115
RCW 41G270.310+00.851J0917.9-4755 (unid)270.12 ±0.13, 0.67±0.110.2480.340.09+0.15subscriptsuperscriptabsent0.150.09{}^{+0.15}_{-0.09} (6.5)6.96
IRS 31G264.124+01.926J0857.7-4256c (unid)264.28±0.05, 1.82 ±0.040.0750.140.05+0.06subscriptsuperscriptabsent0.060.05{}^{+0.06}_{-0.05} (4.9)11.73
Gas coreJ0900.5-4434c (unid)266.13±0.05,0.86±0.05superscript266.13plus-or-minus0.05superscript0.86plus-or-minus0.05{266.13^{\pm 0.05},0.86^{\pm 0.05}}0.390.04+0.05(57)subscriptsuperscript0.390.050.0457{0.39^{+0.05}_{-0.04}(57)}21.22
J0900.5-4434c (unid)
NameMass222d=1 kpc (dust/CO)N𝑁N (dust/CO)
[ 104 M ][103 cm-3]
RCW 320.6 /0.52.4/1.9
RCW 360.5 /0.52.9/2.6
RCW 380.4/0.51.9/2.1
IRS 310.5/0.17.3/ 2.5
Gas core3.3/1.53.4/1.6

Systematic uncertainties

The largest source of uncertainty in the analysis of Fermi-LAT data derives from modeling of the Galactic diffuse emission. We used three different background templates to assess the validity of our results. The Galactic diffuse emission includes the pion decay emission arising from interactions of CR nuclei with the interstellar medium and the inverse Compton (IC) radiation of CR electrons with the interstellar radiation fields. Models for IC emission are usually derived with particles propagation codes, assuming a certain distribution of sources and certain boundary conditions. For what concerns pion emission instead, we tested different models including the latest released galactic background gll_iem_v07.fits. In this model the pion emission is based on maps of HI and CO and is adjusted to the data in order to match the dust emission measured by Planck and the measured γ𝛾\gamma-ray diffuse emission. The fitting procedure is done independently for different rings at different galacto-centric distances, in order to account for possible variation in the CR density towards the Galactic center. For the IC component, the standard background provided by the Fermi collaboration uses a model computed with the galprop propagation code [51]. We do the same for our customized background, choosing the output configuration SS{}^{\textrm{S}}YZ10R30T150C2, which assumes the source distribution from Yusifov and Kucuk[52], and the boundary conditions on the scale of the galactic disk: R=30 kpc, h=10 kpc. We constructed, instead, the model for the pion emission by using spatial maps of the gas derived by CO[44] and Hi [45] line emission, and by dust opacity at 353 Hz [46]. The spectrum is modeled as a broken power law and is fitted to the data. Differently from the standard background, a single spectrum is assumed here for the entire line of sight. This is justified, since the gas in the region of Vela is all concentrated around the distance of similar-to\sim 1 kpc, with the only exception of the region of Vela B which is located at similar-to\sim 2 kpc. This means that the entire molecular cloud complex is concentrated in less-than-or-similar-to\lesssim 1 kpc and therefore one should not expect a significant variation in the CR spectrum here. Spectra obtained with the different backgrounds are reported in Fig. 3. The detection of the sources and the general trend is confirmed with all the backgrounds with the exception of the region corresponding to the peak of gas, which is detected only with the standard and CO based background, but disappears when using a dust template. The values of flux calculated in the different cases vary by a factor 0.2-0.5 when using a gas template and of 0.3-0.8 when using dust. As a further check, we compared the results of our analysis to the values reported in the 4FGL-DR3 catalog [23] and saw that the resulting fluxes differ at most by 20% compared to the tabulated values. Meanwhile, the new version of the catalog (DR4) has been announced and is available in a preliminary version[53]. We checked and confirm that all sources discussed are still detected. While the significance of the sources slightly changes from one to another catalog, probably due to different modeling of the background sources, their flux is confirmed within uncertainties. Other instrumental systematic uncertainties are much smaller, and therefore can be disregarded.

Emissivity

We computed (Table 3) the mass from the observed column density of gas and dust using the conversion factors XCO=2×1020subscript𝑋𝐶𝑂2superscript1020X_{CO}=2\times 10^{20} cm-2 K-1 km-1 s [54] and Xdust=(τD/NH)1=8.3×1025subscript𝑋𝑑𝑢𝑠𝑡superscriptsubscript𝜏𝐷subscript𝑁𝐻18.3superscript1025X_{dust}=(\tau_{D}/N_{H})^{-1}=8.3\times 10^{25} cm-2 [46]. Notice that in general the amount of gas and dust in each region is consistent, apart from the gas-core region and IRS 31, which are 3-times more massive in the dust template. In principle, this could suggest a component of dark gas, i.e. a region where gas tracers are saturated and therefore fail to account for all the gas. To understand if this gamma-ray excess in correspondence of the gas core could be due to a mis-calculation of the mass of the gas, we extracted the spectrum of this region and compared it to the spectrum of the large-scale region associated to the VMR. We used the customized template (based on HI and CO) and isolated from the background the region of the VMR, selected with the condition that the column density exceeded 1022 cm-2. This region has a total mass of 2.8×106absentsuperscript106\times 10^{6} M. The resulting emissivity, defined as the flux per hydrogen atom, is shown in Fig. 4 together with the emissivity derived from diffuse emission in the region within 8 and 10 kpc from the Galactic center [55]. The gas region of the VMR perfectly matches the emissivity of the diffuse emission, with a spectral index of 2.557±0.003{-2.557\pm-0.003}. For the gas core instead, the spectrum is much harder (αγ=2.4±0.05subscript𝛼𝛾plus-or-minus2.40.05\alpha_{\gamma}=-2.4{\pm 0.05}) which suggests a different origin for the emission than untraced gas. We compared also the emission of the Hii regions with the spectrum of the CR sea. The spectra, normalized to the mass of the hydrogen in that regions are shown in Fig 4. These need to be interpreted as the level of excess of these sources over the diffuse emissivity. This is because the underlying VMR is part of the background and is therefore subtracted from the flux of these regions. We see a significant variation of the spectra compared to the one of the diffuse gas. To explain the radiation in terms of a dark component, a localized enhancement of the gas density would be needed as the enhancement varies case by case from 0.5 to 3 times (see Fig.4).

The contribution of winds of star clusters to the Galactic cosmic-ray population (3)
The contribution of winds of star clusters to the Galactic cosmic-ray population (4)

Chance-correlation evaluation

Previous attempt of understanding the nature of the unidentified regions that we targeted were inconclusive. However, in a recent analysis Malyshev and collaborators[25] investigated the 4FGL unidentified sources by studying their possible association with typical source classes. They created 6 classes each including different types of sources and, using random forest (RF) and neural networks (NN) algorithms, they calculate the probability of each unidentified source of belonging to a certain class. Remarkably the sources we investigate have a large probability of belonging to class 6, that includes galactic sources, namely: binaries, pulsars, star-forming regions, supernova remnants and pulsar wind nebulae. In all the cases considered for the discussion the probability of belonging to this class exceeded 16%, in the two brightest cases the probability was larger than 40%. This argument supports our identification with stellar sources, although it should be noticed that these type of classification based on the spectral shape can not predict a new source class, and that embedded star clusters, as the ones we target could have very different spectral characteristic compared to other identified star-forming regions.

In the special case of the HII regions in Vela however, the morphological similarity between the gamma and the IR emission is an additional argument in favor of this identification. We evaluated if the superposition between Fermi and WISE sources in the region of Vela could be a chance coincidence. The 4FGL-DR3 catalog contains 2082 sources with no association. In the RoI, they match with 10 sources from the WISE catalog. We consider it a match if the Fermi source centroid falls within the radius of the HII region. We then simulated 1000 synthetic populations of 2082 sources, by performing Monte Carlo extraction over the longitude and latitude distribution of the unidentified Fermi sources. We repeated the matching procedure with the simulated sources, the distribution of the number of matches is plotted in Figure 5. We notice that with the simulations we never obtain a value as high as 10, meaning that the chances for random correlation are smaller than 0.1%. The average of the matches with the simulated populations is instead 0.4.

The contribution of winds of star clusters to the Galactic cosmic-ray population (5)

Leptonic scenarios

The detected sources are located in an environment with a large target gas density (103similar-toabsentsuperscript103\sim 10^{3} cm-3) and high magnetic field (B40μsimilar-to𝐵40𝜇B\sim 40\leavevmode\nobreak\ \muG ), therefore nuclear interactions are naturally expected to dominate the emission, having a shorter timescale and being the electrons suppressed by cooling. One can see that in these conditions the observed spectra cannot be associated with a leptonic scenario. In the case of inverse Compton scattering on a photon field of energy ϵitalic-ϵ\epsilon, for a given injection rate of electrons, q(t)=q0Eαe𝑞𝑡subscript𝑞0superscript𝐸subscript𝛼𝑒q(t)=q_{0}E^{-\alpha_{e}}, the observed gamma-ray spectrum would be:

Qγ(Eγ)q(E)τcool(dEdt)ICdEdEγ1Eγsimilar-tosubscript𝑄𝛾subscript𝐸𝛾𝑞𝐸subscript𝜏𝑐𝑜𝑜𝑙subscript𝑑𝐸𝑑𝑡𝐼𝐶𝑑𝐸𝑑subscript𝐸𝛾1subscript𝐸𝛾Q_{\gamma}(E_{\gamma})\sim q(E)\tau_{cool}\bigg{(}\frac{dE}{dt}\bigg{)}_{IC}\frac{dE}{dE_{\gamma}}\frac{1}{E_{\gamma}}

We assume as a characteristic timescale τcool=E(dEdt)IC+SYNsubscript𝜏𝑐𝑜𝑜𝑙𝐸subscript𝑑𝐸𝑑𝑡𝐼𝐶𝑆𝑌𝑁\tau_{cool}=\frac{E}{(\frac{dE}{dt})_{IC+SYN}} the cooling timescale due to IC and synchrotoron interactions. The latter is proportional to the radiation and magnetic energy density respectively: (dEdt)IC+SYN=AωR/B.subscript𝑑𝐸𝑑𝑡𝐼𝐶𝑆𝑌𝑁𝐴subscript𝜔𝑅𝐵\big{(}\frac{dE}{dt}\big{)}_{IC+SYN}=A\omega_{R/B}. The fraction of energy transferred from electrons to γ𝛾\gamma-rays is: Eγ=43(Emc2)2ϵE2subscript𝐸𝛾43superscript𝐸𝑚superscript𝑐22italic-ϵproportional-tosuperscript𝐸2E_{\gamma}=\frac{4}{3}\bigg{(}\frac{E}{mc^{2}}\bigg{)}^{2}\epsilon\propto E^{2}, therefore:

Qγ=Q0,γEαγ=q0EAωRAωR+AωBdEdEγ1EγEγ(αe2+1).subscript𝑄𝛾subscript𝑄0𝛾superscript𝐸subscript𝛼𝛾subscript𝑞0𝐸𝐴subscript𝜔𝑅𝐴subscript𝜔𝑅𝐴subscript𝜔𝐵𝑑𝐸𝑑subscript𝐸𝛾1subscript𝐸𝛾proportional-tosubscriptsuperscript𝐸subscript𝛼𝑒21𝛾Q_{\gamma}=Q_{0,\gamma}E^{-\alpha_{\gamma}}=q_{0}\leavevmode\nobreak\ E\leavevmode\nobreak\ \frac{A\omega_{R}}{A\omega_{R}+A\omega_{B}}\frac{dE}{dE_{\gamma}}\frac{1}{E_{\gamma}}\propto E^{-(\frac{\alpha_{e}}{2}+1)}_{\gamma}.

This implies that, in order to obtain the observed gamma-ray spectrum αγgreater-than-or-equivalent-tosubscript𝛼𝛾absent\alpha_{\gamma}\gtrsim 2.6, an injection spectral index of αe3.2greater-than-or-equivalent-tosubscript𝛼𝑒3.2\alpha_{e}\gtrsim 3.2 is required, in the assumption where electrons cool via synchrotron and inverse Compton radiation. The timescale for IC cooling depends on energy and on the radiation field energy density. We estimated the radiation density in the NIR, by integrating the maps provided by WISE at 22μ𝜇\mum regions and we found values spanning from 0.5 to 50eVcm-3. Assuming the latter as nominal value, we obtain a cooling time of 6×107yr(E/1GeV)16superscript107yrsuperscript𝐸1GeV16\times 10^{7}\mathrm{\leavevmode\nobreak\ yr}(E/1\leavevmode\nobreak\ \mathrm{GeV})^{-1}, which would exceed the age of the SCs.In the absence of cooling, the injection spectrum should be even softer to justify the observed emission. In this case, in fact, τ=τage𝜏subscript𝜏𝑎𝑔𝑒\tau=\tau_{age} and one obtains αγ=(αe+1)/2subscript𝛼𝛾subscript𝛼𝑒12\alpha_{\gamma}=(\alpha_{e}+1)/2 which translates to αe=4.2subscript𝛼𝑒4.2\alpha_{e}=4.2 for αγ=2.6subscript𝛼𝛾2.6\alpha_{\gamma}=2.6 .

On the other hand bremsstrahlung in a dense environment is as fast as proton-proton interaction, 5×105yrsimilar-toabsent5superscript105yr\sim 5\times 10^{5}\mathrm{\leavevmode\nobreak\ yr}, for densities of 1000 cm-3 , but in order to explain the emission via bremsstrahlung, a large electron/proton rate would be required. We can roughly estimate the ratio of electron over proton needed to explain the observed gamma-ray luminosity in terms of bremsstrahlung rather than protons. In the bremsstrahlung/hadronic dominated phase we would have Lγ=We/τbremsssubscript𝐿𝛾subscript𝑊𝑒subscript𝜏𝑏𝑟𝑒𝑚𝑠𝑠L_{\gamma}=W_{e}/\tau_{bremss}, and in the hadronic-dominated scenario we would have Lγ=Wp/τppsubscript𝐿𝛾subscript𝑊𝑝subscript𝜏𝑝𝑝L_{\gamma}=W_{p}/\tau_{pp} , where

We=AeEe,minEe,maxEEαesubscript𝑊𝑒subscript𝐴𝑒superscriptsubscriptsubscript𝐸𝑒𝑚𝑖𝑛subscript𝐸𝑒𝑚𝑎𝑥𝐸superscript𝐸subscript𝛼𝑒W_{e}=A_{e}\int_{E_{e,min}}^{E_{e,max}}E\leavevmode\nobreak\ E^{-\alpha_{e}}

and

Wp=ApEp,minEp,maxEEαpsubscript𝑊𝑝subscript𝐴𝑝superscriptsubscriptsubscript𝐸𝑝𝑚𝑖𝑛subscript𝐸𝑝𝑚𝑎𝑥𝐸superscript𝐸subscript𝛼𝑝W_{p}=A_{p}\int_{E_{p,min}}^{E_{p,max}}E\leavevmode\nobreak\ E^{-\alpha_{p}}

are the total energy in electron and protons respectively. By equating the two quantities and assuming that in the observed energy range Ep,min/max=10Ee,min/maxsubscript𝐸𝑝𝑚𝑖𝑛𝑚𝑎𝑥10subscript𝐸𝑒𝑚𝑖𝑛𝑚𝑎𝑥E_{p,min/max}=10\leavevmode\nobreak\ E_{e,min/max} and that the gamma-ray distribution follows the distribution of the parent particles: αe=αp=αγsubscript𝛼𝑒subscript𝛼𝑝subscript𝛼𝛾\alpha_{e}=\alpha_{p}=\alpha_{\gamma} one can obtain Kep=Ae/Apsubscript𝐾𝑒𝑝subscript𝐴𝑒subscript𝐴𝑝K_{ep}=A_{e}/A_{p}. With our spectral index we obtain values from 0.05 to 0.25, which is much larger that what is estimated in the contest of DSA theory, namely 102103superscript102superscript10310^{-2}-10^{-3} [56]

Cosmic ray derivation

Naima [40] is a software package that allows the derivation of the parent CR distribution given a certain γ𝛾\gamma-ray SED. Here we extracted the proton spectrum from the SEDs of the SCs seen by Fermi-LAT and shown in Fig. 2, assuming that pion decay is the main radiation mechanism. By default, the software uses the parametrization of the proton-proton cross section derived by Kafexhiu and collaborators [57]. We assumed a Power-law spectrum for the protons’ total energy, E𝐸E:

dNdE=N0(EE0)αCR𝑑𝑁𝑑𝐸subscript𝑁0superscript𝐸subscript𝐸0subscript𝛼𝐶𝑅\frac{dN}{dE}=N_{0}\bigg{(}\frac{E}{E_{0}}\bigg{)}^{-\alpha_{CR}}

The fitted parameters are reported in Table 4. The total kinetic energy of protons, Wpsubscript𝑊𝑝W_{p}, is also reported. The latter is calculated as 𝑑TTdNdTdifferential-d𝑇𝑇𝑑𝑁𝑑𝑇\int dT\leavevmode\nobreak\ T\leavevmode\nobreak\ \frac{dN}{dT}, remembering that E=T+mpc2𝐸𝑇subscript𝑚𝑝superscript𝑐2E=T+m_{p}c^{2}.

N0subscript𝑁0N_{0}αCRsubscript𝛼𝐶𝑅\alpha_{CR}Wpsubscript𝑊𝑝W_{p}
[1035 eV-1][1046 erg]
RCW 322.330.3+0.2subscriptsuperscriptabsent0.20.3{}^{+0.2}_{-0.3}-2.50.05+0.07subscriptsuperscriptabsent0.070.05{}^{+0.07}_{-0.05}1.3
RCW 362.80.3+0.4subscriptsuperscriptabsent0.40.3{}^{+0.4}_{-0.3}-2.860.06+0.08subscriptsuperscriptabsent0.080.06{}^{+0.08}_{-0.06}0.63
RCW 384.30.3+0.3subscriptsuperscriptabsent0.30.3{}^{+0.3}_{-0.3}-2.710.05+0.07subscriptsuperscriptabsent0.070.05{}^{+0.07}_{-0.05}2.71

Diffusion timescale

We compute the diffusion coefficient from the derived proton energy distribution dNdE𝑑𝑁𝑑𝐸\frac{dN}{dE} derived with naima. In a situation where particle escape the system, the escape time shapes the observed distribution as:

dNdE=q(E)τesc=q(E)R2D0(EE0)δ.𝑑𝑁𝑑𝐸𝑞𝐸subscript𝜏𝑒𝑠𝑐𝑞𝐸superscript𝑅2subscript𝐷0superscript𝐸subscript𝐸0𝛿\frac{dN}{dE}=q(E)\tau_{esc}=q(E)\frac{R^{2}}{D_{0}(\frac{E}{E_{0}})^{\delta}}.

This expression can be used to compute the CR luminosity, LCR=ηLmeccsubscript𝐿𝐶𝑅𝜂subscript𝐿𝑚𝑒𝑐𝑐L_{CR}=\eta L_{mecc}, which we assume to be a fraction η𝜂\eta of the mechanical luminosity:

LCR=ηLmecc=𝑑EEdNdEsubscript𝐿𝐶𝑅𝜂subscript𝐿𝑚𝑒𝑐𝑐differential-d𝐸𝐸𝑑𝑁𝑑𝐸L_{CR}=\eta L_{mecc}=\int dEE\frac{dN}{dE}

and therefore derive τescsubscript𝜏𝑒𝑠𝑐\tau_{esc} and D0subscript𝐷0D_{0} as a function of η𝜂\eta. We compute this for RCW 38, using its mechanical luminosity which is constrained both by wind-bubble theory[33] and by simulations. We find for this system D0=η 1.7×1028subscript𝐷0𝜂1.7superscript1028D_{0}=\eta\leavevmode\nobreak\ 1.7\times 10^{28} cm2 s-1 and τesc=η1 7.6×1011subscript𝜏𝑒𝑠𝑐superscript𝜂17.6superscript1011\tau_{esc}=\eta^{-1}\leavevmode\nobreak\ 7.6\times 10^{11} s.

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The contribution of winds of star clusters to the Galactic cosmic-ray population (2024)

FAQs

The contribution of winds of star clusters to the Galactic cosmic-ray population? ›

Among Galactic objects, winds from stellar clusters meet the energetic requirement and provide a suitable environment for particle acceleration. The recent detection of some of these objects in gamma rays confirms that they indeed harbor high-energy particles.

What is the source of galactic cosmic rays? ›

Scientists believe cosmic rays get spit out by faraway stars exploding (called supernovas). Others could be produced when matter falls into supermassive black holes, from highly magnetized neutron stars, or when galaxies collide.

What is the effect of galactic cosmic ray? ›

Research studies of exposure in various doses and strengths of radiation provide strong evidence that cancer and degenerative diseases are to be expected from exposures to galactic cosmic rays (GCR) or solar particle events (SPE).

What is the composition of the cosmic rays? ›

He had discovered cosmic rays. These high-energy particles arriving from outer space are mainly (89%) protons – nuclei of hydrogen, the lightest and most common element in the universe – but they also include nuclei of helium (10%) and heavier nuclei (1%), all the way up to uranium.

How are cosmic rays formed? ›

They originate from the Sun, from outside of the Solar System in our own galaxy, and from distant galaxies. Upon impact with Earth's atmosphere, cosmic rays produce showers of secondary particles, some of which reach the surface, although the bulk are deflected off into space by the magnetosphere or the heliosphere.

What does NASA say about cosmic rays? ›

The composition of cosmic rays is important because these rays are a direct sample of matter from outside the solar system and contain elements that are much too rare to be seen in spectroscopic lines from other stars. They also provide important information on the chemical evolution of the universe.

What do cosmic rays do to humans? ›

Space radiation can lead to other effects. Radiation can alter the cardiovascular system, damaging the heart, harden and narrow arteries, and/or eliminate some of the cells in linings of the blood vessels, leading to cardiovascular disease.

Are galactic cosmic rays positive or negative? ›

Since cosmic rays are charged – positively charged protons or nuclei, or negatively charged electrons – their paths through space can be deflected by magnetic fields (except for the highest energy cosmic rays).

What can stop galactic cosmic rays? ›

In general, the best shields will be able to block a spectrum of radiation. Aboard the space station, the use of hydrogen-rich shielding such as polyethylene in the most frequently occupied locations, such as the sleeping quarters and the galley, has reduced the crew's exposure to space radiation.

How do cosmic rays affect the Earth's environment? ›

During the impact of cosmic rays with the atmosphere of the Earth, ionization takes place. During this ionization the thermal energy is utilized to produce a regional fall in the temperature of the earth, which may lead to sudden snowfall in higher latitude and altitudes of the Earth.

Who emits cosmic rays? ›

In essence, supernovas act like huge, natural particle accelerators. The Earth is constantly exposed to galactic cosmic radiation. Solar cosmic radiation is composed of charged particles emitted by the Sun, predominantly electrons, protons and helium nuclei.

What is the energy of a cosmic ray? ›

Most galactic cosmic rays have energies between 100 MeV (corresponding to a velocity for protons of 43% of the speed of light) and 10 GeV (corresponding to 99.6% of the speed of light). The number of cosmic rays with energies beyond 1 GeV decreases by about a factor of 50 for every factor of 10 increase in energy.

How to attract cosmic energy? ›

Meditation helps to bring your thoughts and emotions into balance and can help open you up to the flow of cosmic energy. Other methods include visualising the energy around you, using crystals, and practising yoga or other forms of exercise.

What is the highest energy particle ever recorded? ›

The Oh-My-God particle was an ultra-high-energy cosmic ray detected on 15 October 1991 by the Fly's Eye camera in Dugway Proving Ground, Utah, United States. As of 2024, it is the highest-energy cosmic ray ever observed. Its energy was estimated as (3.2±0.9)×1020 eV (320 exa-eV).

What is cosmic energy superpower? ›

The Power Cosmic can give you such abilities as superhuman strength, immortality, cosmic awareness, energy and molecular manipulation as well as the ability to fly faster than the speed of light. The Power Cosmic is the name of a vast source of limitless godly cosmic energy and power.

What are cosmic rays for dummies? ›

Scientists know that about 90 percent of cosmic rays are high-energy protons, while the other 10 percent are electrons, gamma rays — which are the highest energy form of light — and the nuclei of atoms heavier than hydrogen.

What are galactic gamma ray sources? ›

The objects and phenomena most closely linked to the production of high-energy gamma rays in the Milky Way include (1) molecular clouds within the spiral arms and disk (where high-energy cosmic rays interact to produce gamma-rays); (2) supernova remnants (whose shock waves are a presumed site of particle acceleration ...

What is the source of cosmic background radiation? ›

The cosmic microwave background radiation is the faint remnant glow of the big bang. This false color image, covering about 2.5 percent of the sky, shows fluctuations in the ionized gas that later condensed to make superclusters of galaxies. Photo courtesy of the BOOMERANG Project.

What is the source of cosmic radio waves? ›

Nearly all types of astronomical objects give off some radio radiation, but the strongest sources of such emissions include pulsars, certain nebulas, quasars, and radio galaxies. In 1931 Karl Jansky, an American radio engineer, detected radio waves from outer space.

What is the source of cosmic power? ›

Fusion is the ultimate cosmic energy source. The Sun and all stars generate energy by fusion. The efficiency of fusion (and fission) — which rearrange the atomic nuclei — is ten million times better than chemical energy — which rearranges the electrons shared by atoms.

References

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