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A connection between star formation activity and cosmic rays in the starburst galaxy M 82

Abstract:
Although Galactic cosmic rays (protons and nuclei) are widely believed to be dominantly accelerated by the winds and supernovae of massive stars, definitive evidence of this origin remains elusive nearly a century after their discovery [1]. The active regions of starburst galaxies have exceptionally high rates of star formation, and their large size, more than 50 times the diameter of similar Galactic regions, uniquely enables reliable calorimetric measurements of their potentially high cosmic-ray density [2]. The cosmic rays produced in the formation, life, and death of their massive stars are expected to eventually produce diffuse gamma-ray emission via their interactions with interstellar gas and radiation. M 82, the prototype small starburst galaxy, is predicted to be the brightest starburst galaxy in gamma rays [3, 4]. Here we report the detection of >700 GeV gamma rays from M 82. From these data we determine a cosmic-ray density of 250 eV cm-3 in the starburst core of M 82, or about 500 times the average Galactic density. This result strongly supports that cosmic-ray acceleration is tied to star formation activity, and that supernovae and massive-star winds are the dominant accelerators.

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Publisher copy:
10.1038/nature08557

Authors



Journal:
Nature More from this journal
Volume:
462
Issue:
7274
Pages:
770-772
Publication date:
2009-11-04
DOI:
EISSN:
1476-4687
ISSN:
0028-0836


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:410310
UUID:
uuid:17f0da8d-b0a4-4578-8604-eca70c1669f3
Local pid:
pubs:410310
Source identifiers:
410310
Deposit date:
2013-11-16

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