A&A 383, 423-439 (2002)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20011783
Synchrotron self-Comptonized emission of low energy cosmic ray electrons in the Universe
I. Individual sources
T. A. Enßlin1 and R. A. Sunyaev1, 21 Max-Planck-Institut für Astrophysik, Karl-Schwarzschild-Str.1, Postfach 1317, 85741 Garching, Germany
2 Space Research Institute (IKI), Profsoyuznaya 84/32, Moscow 117810, Russia
(Received 17 July 2001 / Accepted 4 December 2001)
Abstract
Most of the Universe's populations of low energy cosmic ray
electrons in the energy range of 1-100 MeV still manage to elude
detection by our instruments, since their synchrotron emission is at
too low frequencies. We investigate a mechanism which can lead to
observable emission of such electron populations: synchrotron-self
Comptonization (SSC). The inverse Compton (IC) scattering can shift
otherwise unobservable low-frequency 10 kHz-10 MHz photons into
observable radio, infrared (IR) or even more energetic wave-bands. The
resulting emission should be polarized. We also consider IC
scattering of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and the cosmic
radio background (CRB). Electron spectral aging due to synchrotron,
IC and adiabatic losses or gains influences the resulting spectrum.
The predicted radiation spectrum is a strong function of the history
of the source, of the low energy spectrum of relativistic electrons,
and of redshift. It has typically two maxima, and a
decrement in between at CMB frequencies. Detection will provide a
sensitive probe of the environment of radio galaxies. We demonstrate
that the fossil remnants of powerful radio galaxies are promising
detection candidates, especially when they are embedded in a dense
intra-cluster medium (ICM). GHz peaked sources (GPS) have very low
SSC luminosities, which may, however, extend into the X-ray or even
the gamma ray regime. Clusters of galaxies with relativistic electron
populations may be another detectable sources. Fossil radio plasma
released by our own Galaxy could be revealed by its large angular
scale SSC flux. We discuss the expected detectability of these
sources with new and upcoming instruments such as LOFAR, GMRT, EVLA, ATA,
ALMA, PLANCK, and HERSCHEL.
Key words: radiation mechanism: non-thermal -- scattering -- galaxies: active -- galaxies: intergalactic medium -- galaxies: cluster: general -- cosmic microwave background
Offprint request: T. A. Enßlin, ensslin@mpa-garching.mpg.de
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