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Account of the baryonic feedback effect in γ-ray measurements of intergalactic magnetic fields

Aims. Intergalactic magnetic fields in the voids of the large-scale structure can be probed via measurements of secondary γ-ray emission from γ-ray interactions with extragalactic background light. Lower bounds on the magnetic field in the voids were derived from the nondetection of this emission. I...

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Autores principales: Bondarenko, Kyrylo, Boyarsky, Alexey, Korochkin, Alexander, Neronov, Andrii, Semikoz, Dmitri, Sokolenko, Anastasia
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202141595
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2784907
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author Bondarenko, Kyrylo
Boyarsky, Alexey
Korochkin, Alexander
Neronov, Andrii
Semikoz, Dmitri
Sokolenko, Anastasia
author_facet Bondarenko, Kyrylo
Boyarsky, Alexey
Korochkin, Alexander
Neronov, Andrii
Semikoz, Dmitri
Sokolenko, Anastasia
author_sort Bondarenko, Kyrylo
collection CERN
description Aims. Intergalactic magnetic fields in the voids of the large-scale structure can be probed via measurements of secondary γ-ray emission from γ-ray interactions with extragalactic background light. Lower bounds on the magnetic field in the voids were derived from the nondetection of this emission. It is not clear a priori what kind of magnetic field is responsible for the suppression of the secondary γ-ray flux: a cosmological magnetic field that might be filling the voids, or the field spread by galactic winds driven by star formation and active galactic nuclei.Methods. We used IllustrisTNG cosmological simulations to study the effect of magnetized galactic wind bubbles on the secondary γ-ray flux.Results. We show that within the IllustrisTNG model of baryonic feedback, galactic wind bubbles typically provide energy-independent secondary flux suppression at a level of about 10%. The observed flux suppression effect has to be due to the cosmological magnetic field in the voids. This might not be the case for the special case when the primary γ-ray source has a hard intrinsic γ-ray spectrum that peaks in the energy range above 50 TeV. In this case, the observational data may be strongly affected by the magnetized bubble that is blown by the source host galaxy.Key words: magnetic fields / intergalactic medium / gamma rays: general / ISM: jets and outflows / magnetohydrodynamics (MHD)
id cern-2784907
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2021
record_format invenio
spelling cern-27849072023-01-31T08:54:07Zdoi:10.1051/0004-6361/202141595http://cds.cern.ch/record/2784907engBondarenko, KyryloBoyarsky, AlexeyKorochkin, AlexanderNeronov, AndriiSemikoz, DmitriSokolenko, AnastasiaAccount of the baryonic feedback effect in γ-ray measurements of intergalactic magnetic fieldsastro-ph.HEAstrophysics and Astronomyastro-ph.COAstrophysics and AstronomyAims. Intergalactic magnetic fields in the voids of the large-scale structure can be probed via measurements of secondary γ-ray emission from γ-ray interactions with extragalactic background light. Lower bounds on the magnetic field in the voids were derived from the nondetection of this emission. It is not clear a priori what kind of magnetic field is responsible for the suppression of the secondary γ-ray flux: a cosmological magnetic field that might be filling the voids, or the field spread by galactic winds driven by star formation and active galactic nuclei.Methods. We used IllustrisTNG cosmological simulations to study the effect of magnetized galactic wind bubbles on the secondary γ-ray flux.Results. We show that within the IllustrisTNG model of baryonic feedback, galactic wind bubbles typically provide energy-independent secondary flux suppression at a level of about 10%. The observed flux suppression effect has to be due to the cosmological magnetic field in the voids. This might not be the case for the special case when the primary γ-ray source has a hard intrinsic γ-ray spectrum that peaks in the energy range above 50 TeV. In this case, the observational data may be strongly affected by the magnetized bubble that is blown by the source host galaxy.Key words: magnetic fields / intergalactic medium / gamma rays: general / ISM: jets and outflows / magnetohydrodynamics (MHD)Intergalactic magnetic fields in the voids of the large-scale structure can be probed via measurements of secondary gamma-ray emission from gamma-ray interactions with extragalactic background light. Lower bounds on the magnetic field in the voids were derived from the non-detection of this emission. It is not clear a priori what kind of magnetic field is responsible for the suppression of the secondary gamma-ray flux: a cosmological magnetic field that might be filling the voids or the field spread by galactic winds driven by star formation and active galactic nuclei. We used IllustrisTNG cosmological simulations to study the effect of magnetized galactic wind bubbles on the secondary gamma-ray flux. We show that within the IllustrisTNG model of baryonic feedback, the galactic wind bubbles typically provide energy-independent secondary flux suppression at the level of about 10%. The observed flux suppression effect has to be due to the cosmological magnetic field in the voids. This might not be the case for a special case when the primary gamma-ray source has a hard intrinsic gamma-ray spectrum that peaks in the energy range above 50 TeV. In this case, the observational data may be strongly affected by the magnetized bubble that is blown by the source host galaxy.arXiv:2106.02690oai:cds.cern.ch:27849072021-06-04
spellingShingle astro-ph.HE
Astrophysics and Astronomy
astro-ph.CO
Astrophysics and Astronomy
Bondarenko, Kyrylo
Boyarsky, Alexey
Korochkin, Alexander
Neronov, Andrii
Semikoz, Dmitri
Sokolenko, Anastasia
Account of the baryonic feedback effect in γ-ray measurements of intergalactic magnetic fields
title Account of the baryonic feedback effect in γ-ray measurements of intergalactic magnetic fields
title_full Account of the baryonic feedback effect in γ-ray measurements of intergalactic magnetic fields
title_fullStr Account of the baryonic feedback effect in γ-ray measurements of intergalactic magnetic fields
title_full_unstemmed Account of the baryonic feedback effect in γ-ray measurements of intergalactic magnetic fields
title_short Account of the baryonic feedback effect in γ-ray measurements of intergalactic magnetic fields
title_sort account of the baryonic feedback effect in γ-ray measurements of intergalactic magnetic fields
topic astro-ph.HE
Astrophysics and Astronomy
astro-ph.CO
Astrophysics and Astronomy
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202141595
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2784907
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