Two kinds of Galactic source populations could explain the cosmic-ray observation up to the "knee" region
Abstract
Observations of diffuse gamma rays above hundreds of TeV from the Galactic disk provide strong evidence for the existence of PeV cosmic-ray accelerators--so-called PeVatrons--in the Galaxy. However, mounting observations have ruled out most supernova remnants as likely PeVatron candidates, suggesting instead that multiple populations of cosmic-ray sources exist in the Galaxy. Recently, the LHAASO collaboration reported the detection of ultra-high-energy gamma rays from microquasars, establishing that the black holes in these systems, which accrete matter from companion stars, are powerful PeV particle accelerators. In this work, we propose a two-component source model to explain the observed cosmic-ray spectra and composition up to the PeV range. Below approximately 100 TeV, supernova remnants serve as the dominant sources; above this energy, microquasars are considered the primary candidate population. Within this scenario, the assumption of a charge-dependent cutoff well accounts for the latest measurements, including the proton and helium spectra up to the PeV range, the energy-dependent composition, and the all-particle spectrum. In contrast, the nuclei-dependent cutoff hypothesis is ruled out by the data.
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