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A&A 399, 409-420 (2003)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20021827
On the escape of cosmic rays from radio galaxy cocoons
T. A. EnßlinMax-Planck-Institut für Astrophysik, Karl-Schwarzschild-Str.1, 85740 Garching, Germany Department of Physics, University of Toronto, 60 St. George Street, Toronto M5S1A7, Canada
(Received 2 November 2000 / Accepted 12 November 2002 )
Abstract
The escape rate of cosmic ray (CR) particles from radio
galaxy cocoons is a problem of high astrophysical relevance: e.g. if
CR electrons are stored for long times in the dilute relativistic
medium filling the radio cocoons (radio plasma in the following)
they are protected against Coulomb losses and thus are able to produce
a significant non-thermal Comptonisation signature on the CMB. On the
other hand, CR protons and positrons which leak out of radio plasma
can interact with the ambient medium, leading to characteristic gamma
ray radiation by pion decay and pair annihilation. In order better
understand such problems a model for the escape of CR particles from
radio galaxy cocoons is presented here. It is assumed that the radio
cocoon is poorly magnetically connected to the environment. An extreme
case of this kind is an insulating boundary layer of magnetic fields,
which can efficiently suppress particle escape. More likely, magnetic
field lines are less organised and allow the transport of CR particles
from the source interior to the surface region. For such a scenario
two transport regimes are analysed: diffusion of particles along
inter-phase magnetic flux tubes (leaving the cocoon) and cross field
transport of particles in flux tubes touching the cocoon surface. The
cross field diffusion is likely the dominate escape path, unless a
significant fraction of the surface is magnetically connected to the
environment. Major cluster merger should strongly enhance the
particle escape by two complementary mechanisms. i) The merger shock
waves shred radio cocoons into filamentary structures, allowing the
CRs to easily reach the radio plasma boundary due to the changed
morphology. ii) Also efficient particle losses can be expected for
radio cocoons not compressed in shock waves. There, for a short period
after the sudden injection of large scale turbulence, the (anomalous)
cross field diffusion can be enhanced by several orders of
magnitude. This lasts until the turbulent energy cascade has reached
the microscopic scales, which determine the value of the microscopic
diffusion coefficients.
Key words: ISM: cosmic rays -- diffusion -- magnetic fields -- galaxies: intergalactic medium -- galaxies: active
© ESO 2003
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