Star Formation Drives Production of Low Energy Cosmic Rays

Abstract

For over a century, the origin of low-energy cosmic rays (LECRs), the dominant heaters and ionizers of dense interstellar gas, remains elusive owing to solar modulation and uncertain transport processes. In this study, we introduce a new astrophysical approach based on HI Narrow Self-Absorption (HINSA) to obtain spatially resolved measurements of LECR ionization rates using high-fidelity HI observations toward the Orion region from the FAST telescope. The LECR ionization rate is found to scale with local star formation rate (SFR) as log10ζ= (1.4 0.70)log10SFR + (-10.5 2.9). Moreover, it increases with visual extinction, and is found to exceed, toward active star-forming regions, the value predicted for diffuse regions based on Voyager measurements and an external propagation model. These findings demonstrate that LECRs are generated in situ by star-forming activities rather than penetrating from the broader Galactic cosmic-ray population. This is further supported by Fermi-LAT gamma-ray observations toward the Orion region. Together, these results resolve a key uncertainty in cosmic-ray origin and establish a new avenue for quantifying the energetic feedback that regulates the interstellar medium.

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