4.6 Article

High energy particles from young supernovae: gamma-ray and neutrino connections

Journal

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1475-7516/2022/08/011

Keywords

core-collapse supernovae; gamma ray detectors; neutrino detectors; particle acceleration

Funding

  1. Max Planck India Mobility Grant from the Max Planck Society
  2. DST/SERB [CRG/2021/002961, MTR/2021/000540]
  3. Villum Foundation [37358]
  4. Carlsberg Foundation [CF18-0183]
  5. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [Sonderforschungbereich SFB 1258]
  6. Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All Sky Astrophysics in 3 Dimensions (ASTRO 3D) [CE170100013]

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Young core-collapse supernovae (YSNe) are sources of high-energy neutrinos and gamma-rays, with Type IIn YSNe producing the largest flux. Fermi-LAT and the Cherenkov Telescope Array have the potential to detect different types of YSNe at varying distances.
Young core-collapse supernovae (YSNe) are factories of high-energy neutrinos and gamma-rays as the shock accelerated protons efficiently interact with the protons in the dense circumstellar medium. We explore the detection prospects of secondary particles from YSNe of Type IIn, II-P, IIb/II-L, and Ib/c. Type IIn YSNe are found to produce the largest flux of neutrinos and gamma-rays, followed by II-P YSNe. Fermi-LAT and the Cherenkov Telescope Array (IceCube-Gen2) have the potential to detect Type IIn YSNe up to 10 Mpc (4 Mpc), with the remaining YSNe Types being detectable closer to Earth. We also find that YSNe may dominate the diffuse neutrino background, especially between 10 TeV and 10(3) TeV, while they do not constitute a dominant component to the isotropic gamma-ray background observed by Fermi-LAT. At the same time, the IceCube high-energy starting events and Fermi-LAT data already allow us to exclude a large fraction of the model parameter space of YSNe otherwise inferred from multi-wavelength electromagnetic observations of these transients.

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