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While traveling from galactic acceleration sites, CRs may undergo many processes before arriving at Earth. All these physical processes can be described as follows:
$ \begin{aligned}[b]\frac{\partial \psi({\boldsymbol{r}}, p, t)}{\partial t} =& Q({\boldsymbol{r}}, p, t)+\boldsymbol{\nabla} \cdot\left(D_{x x} \boldsymbol{\nabla} \psi-{\boldsymbol{V}}_{c} \psi\right) +\frac{\partial}{\partial p} p^{2} D_{p p} \frac{\partial}{\partial p} \frac{1}{p^{2}} \psi\\&-\frac{\partial}{\partial p}\left[\dot{p} \psi-\frac{p}{3}\left(\boldsymbol{\nabla} \cdot {\boldsymbol{V}}_{c} \psi\right)\right] -\frac{\psi}{\tau_{f}}-\frac{\psi}{\tau_{r}}, \end{aligned} $
(1) where
$\psi({\boldsymbol{r}},p,t)$ is the CR density per unit particle momentum,$Q({\boldsymbol{r}}, p, t)$ is the source distribution,${D_{xx}}$ is the diffusion tensor in physical space, and${D_{pp}}$ the diffusion coefficient in momentum space.${\dot{p}}$ is the momentum loss rate resulting from interactions with the ISM, GMFs, or the interstellar radiation field (ISRF), and${\tau_{\rm f} }$ and${\tau_{\rm r} }$ are the time scales for fragmentation loss and radioactive decay, respectively.${V_{\rm c}}$ is the convection velocity, but convection processes were ignored in this work.The injection spectrum of CR sources is given as follows:
$ Q( p) = q_{0}\; \left\{\begin{array}{ll} \left(\dfrac{p}{ p_{\mathrm{br}}}\right)^{-\nu_{1}} & \text { if }\left(p<p_{\mathrm{br}}\right) \\ \left(\dfrac{p}{p_{\mathrm{br}}}\right)^{-\nu_{2}} \, {\rm e}^{-\frac{p}{ \hat{p}}} & \text { if }\left(p \geqslant p_{\mathrm{br}}\right) \end{array}\right., $
(2) where
$q_0$ is a normalization coefficient,$ \nu_1 $ ($ \nu_2 $ ) is the spectral index below (above)$p_{\mathrm{br}}$ , and${\hat{p}}$ is the cutoff rigidity. The spatial distribution of sources takes the form of an SNR distribution reported previously [31]:$ f(r,z) \propto \left(\frac{r}{r_\odot}\right)^{a}\; {\rm e}^{\left(-b\frac{r -r_\odot}{r_\odot}\right)}\; {\rm e}^{\left(-\frac{|z|}{z_s}\right)}, $
(3) with
$r_\odot = 8.5$ kpc,$z_s = 0.2$ kpc,$ a = 1.69 $ , and$ b = 3.33 $ .The diffusion coefficient,
${ D_{xx}}$ , which depends on the radial distance r, vertical height z, and particle rigidity p, can be written as$ D_{xx}(r, z, p) = D_0 F(r, z) \beta^\eta \left(\frac{p}{p_0} \right)^{\delta_0 F(r, z)} \; , $
(4) where
$D_0$ represents the normalization factor at$p_0$ ;$ \rm\eta $ is the low-energy correction factor of the diffusion coefficient, which was fixed at 0.05;$ \rm\delta_0 $ characterizes the rigidity dependence of the diffusion coefficient; and F(r,z) is anticorrelated with the source density distribution f(r,z). F(r,z) is parameterized as$ F(r,z) = \left\{\begin{array}{*{20}{l}} g(r,z) +\left[1-g(r,z) \right] \left(\dfrac{z}{\xi z_h} \right)^{n} , & |z| \leqslant \xi z_h \\ 1 \; , & |z| > \xi z_h \end{array}\right., $
(5) where n characterizes the sharpness between the inner and outer halos,
$ g(r,z) = \frac{N_m}{1+f(r,z)}, $
(6) and
$N_m$ is a normalized factor. The difference between the CP and SDP models is the value of$F(r,z)$ of the inner halo. For the CP model, it is a constant, while for the SDP model, it is related to the source distribution. Thus, the diffusion coefficients of the CRs with the same rigidity in two different locations are the same for the CP model, while they are related to f(r,z) and$\xi z_h$ for the SDP model.Re-acceleration is modeled as momentum-space diffusion, where the coefficient
$D_{pp}$ is related to the spatial coefficient$D_{xx}$ via the effective$ \rm Alfvénic $ velocity$v_{\rm A}$ , as follows:$ D_{pp}D_{xx} = \frac{4p^{2}v_{\rm A}^{2}}{3\delta(4-\delta^{2})(4-\delta)}, $
(7) where
$\delta = F(r,z)\delta_0$ . More detailed descriptions about the SDP model have been published previously [32-36]. The numerical package DRAGON [37] was used to solve the transport equation. -
We first calculated the
$ \gamma $ -ray emissivity by employing a set of ready-made transport configurations with various halo heights. Because the diffusion properties for different halo sizes could vary, we tuned the propagation parameters based on the secondary-to-primary ratios and calculated the$ \gamma $ -ray emissivity again. -
Propagation parameters used previously [30] were employed to calculate the
$ \rm \gamma $ -ray emissivity. This set of parameters was obtained under the SDP plus local source assumption, which reproduces various anomalies well, such as CR spectrum and CR anisotropy anomalies. The detailed parameters are listed in Table 1. Figure 1 shows the$ \rm\gamma $ -ray emissivities normalized to the value at the Sun's position with this model transport configuration and various halo heights. The gray rectangles [29] represent emissivity scaling factors from the Fermi-LAT, which are the ratios of the$ \gamma $ -ray emissivity ($ \gamma $ -ray emission rate per hydrogen atom) in each region of HVCs and IVCs to the values in the disk in the solar circle, with measured energies between$ \rm 300\; MeV $ and$ \rm 10\; GeV $ . The emissivity of the local gas was assigned to the range from$z = 0\;\rm kpc$ to$ \rm 0.3\; kpc $ (disk). The horizontal widths of the rectangles indicate the lower and upper limits on their distances, and the vertical height in dark gray (light gray) corresponds to the total statistical uncertainties of the emissivity scaling factors. Detailed information about the target regions and their emissivity scaling factors has been reported previously [29].$z_h$ /
kpc$D_0$ /
$\rm 10^{28}\; cm^{2}\; s^{-1}$ $N_m$ $\rm\delta_{0}$ $v_{\rm A}$ /
$\rm\; km\; s^{-1}$ SDP+local source $^\ddagger$ 8.76 0.39 0.65 3.5 CP 5 3.72 0.24 0.46 22 SDP 3.3 3.25 0.25 0.58 6 5 5.04 0.29 0.6 6 9 7.25 0.37 0.65 6 15 10.8 0.40 0.69 6 $^\dagger$ n and$\xi$ were set to 4 and 0.1, respectively.$^\ddagger$ This set of parameters was adopted from [30].Table 1. Propagation parameters
$^\dagger$ .Figure 1. (color online) Model predictions of the
$ \gamma $ -ray emissivity with energies ranging from$ \rm 300\; MeV $ to$ \rm 10\; GeV $ were compared with the data. A set of ready-made transport configurations under the SDP + local source assumption [30] with various halo heights was employed, and the detailed parameters are listed in Table 1. Purple, red, blue, and green lines represent the SDP model with$z_h = 3.3, 5, 9,$ and$ \rm 15\; kpc $ , respectively. Shaded rectangles are the emissivity scaling factors from Fermi-LAT observations [29].There was general agreement between the model curves and measurements in the region of the left panel (
$l = 240^{\circ}, b = 75^{\circ}$ ), which is an extension of the IV Arch. In the region of the right panel ($l = 150^{\circ}, b = 35^{\circ}$ ), together with the emissivity of the low-latitude IVs, upper limits from the HVC in the latitude of$ \rm 2.6 $ –$ \rm 6.8\; kpc $ provide the strongest limit on the value of the halo size. To not exceed the upper limit, the halo size must satisfy$ 3.3\; {\rm kpc} < z_h < 9\; {\rm kpc} $ . Furthermore, the$ \gamma $ -ray emissivity at low latitudes (IH) was nearly the same, regardless of the size of the halo. The differences between the models increased with latitude; thus,$ \gamma $ -ray observations of mid- and high-latitude clouds should be very valuable. -
The results from a set of second-hand fixed propagation parameters and various
$z_h$ values indicated that the relative$ \gamma $ -ray emissivity changed with the thickness of the halo. However, the propagation parameters would change with different halo heights. Below, the results with propagation parameters adjusted by the halo height are presented and used to test the statements above.First, fits of the model prediction to the B/C and
$ \rm {}^{10}Be/{}^{9}Be $ ratios were performed to determine the propagation parameters. The CR spectra and large-scale all-sky$ \rm \gamma $ -rays were used to verify the consistency between the predictions from well-tuned models and observations. Consequently, the tuned transport parameters are listed in Table 1, and diagrams showing the secondary-to-primary ratios, CR spectra, and large-scale all-sky$ \rm \gamma $ -rays are shown in the Appendix. The$ \rm \gamma $ -ray emissivity values were calculated again, and results from the CP model are also shown for comparison.With the propagation parameters listed in Table 1, the
$ \gamma $ -ray emissivity calculation was repeated, and the results are presented in Fig. 2; they are not significantly different from the model curves in Fig. 1. This suggests that the propagation parameters had little effect on the distribution of the$ \rm \gamma $ -ray emissivity for specific$\xi z_h$ . At steady state, propagation is dominated by diffusive processes, and Eq. (1) can be expressed as$ \boldsymbol{\nabla}\; \cdot\; \left( D_{xx}\boldsymbol{\nabla}\psi\right) = \rm-Q $ . Therefore,$ \rm \psi $ is directly proportional to$D_{0}$ . Once the$\xi z_h$ values are selected, the ratio of the fluxes of the$ \rm\gamma $ -rays with the same rigidity in two different locations will be a constant determined by f(r,z).Figure 2. (color online) Model predictions of the
$ \gamma $ -ray emissivity with energies ranging from$ \rm 300\; MeV $ to$ \rm 10\; GeV $ compared with the data. The propagation parameters were properly tuned with various halo heights under the pure SDP model assumptions and are listed in Table 1. Purple, red, blue, and green lines represent the SDP model with$z_h = 3.3, 5, 9,$ and$ \rm 15\; kpc $ , respectively. Black lines are from the CP model. Shaded rectangles are the emissivity scaling factors from Fermi-LAT observations [29].
Constraining the cosmic ray propagation halo thickness using Fermi-LAT observations of high-latitude clouds
- Received Date: 2021-03-31
- Available Online: 2021-10-15
Abstract: The diffusive halo is a basic characteristic of cosmic ray (CR) propagation and can advance our understanding of many CR-related phenomena and indirect dark matter. The method used to derive the halo size often has degeneracy problems and is thus affected by large uncertainties. The diffuse