Friday, July 13, 2012

1207.3025 (G. Brunetti et al.)

Probing the origin of giant radio halos through radio and gamma-ray data : the case of the Coma cluster    [PDF]

G. Brunetti, P. Blasi, O. Reimer, L. Rudnick, A. Bonafede, S. Brown
We combine all available information about the spectral shape and morphology of the radio halo of the Coma cluster with the gamma-ray upper limits obtained by the Fermi-LAT and with the magnetic field strength derived from Faraday rotation measures (RM). We explore the possibility that the radio halo is due to synchrotron emission of secondary electrons generated via p-p collisions in the intra-cluster-medium (ICM). First we investigate the case of pure secondary models. We use the observed spatial distribution of the halo's radio brightness to constrain the amount of cosmic rays (CRs) and their spatial distribution in the cluster that are required by the model. Under the canonical assumption that the spectrum of CRs is a power-law in momentum and that the spectrum of secondaries is stationary, we find that the combination of the steep spectrum of CRs necessary to explain the spectrum of the halo and their very broad spatial distribution (and large energy density) result in a gamma-ray emission in excess of present limits, unless the cluster magnetic field is sufficiently large. However such a field appears inconsistent with constraints from RM. Second we investigate more complex models based on secondary particles in which CR protons and their secondaries are all reaccelerated by MHD turbulence. We show that under these conditions it is possible to reproduce the radio data and to predict gamma-rays in agreement with the Fermi-LAT limits without tension with constraints on the cluster magnetic field. Reacceleration of secondaries by MHD turbulence also requires a spatial distribution of CRs much flatter than that of the ICM, if both the turbulent and magnetic field energy densities scale with that of the ICM. However broader spatial distributions of turbulence and field and/or the reacceleration of additional primary electrons in the ICM greatly alleviate this requirement.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1207.3025

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