Futurity

Do cosmic rays come from galactic bubbles?

New evidence from two galactic bubbles suggests that the bubbles, and other structures like them, may generate cosmic rays.
galactic bubble

New research provides evidence that galactic bubbles may be a source of cosmic rays.

In space, a galactic bubble is composed of a lighter gas trapped inside a heavier one, and these bubbles can be huge.

Galaxy NGC 3079, which is located approximately 67 million light years from Earth, contains two galactic bubbles—one that is 4,900 light years across, and another that is 3,600 light years across. These bubbles give off light in the form of X-ray, optical, and radio emissions, which allow NASA telescopes, such as those at the NASA Chandra X-ray Observatory, to detect them.

New observations from Chandra show that a cosmic particle accelerator is producing ultra-energetic particles on the edges of NGS 3079’s cosmic bubbles, therefore providing evidence cosmic rays come from these bubbles and structures like them.

As the outer regions of galactic bubbles expand and collide with surrounding gas, researchers believe that charged particles scatter and bounce off magnetic fields in the shock waves. When the particles cross the shock front, they are super accelerated to energies about 100 times stronger than those the world’s most powerful human-made particle accelerator generates. Some of these energy particles may escape and even strike Earth’s atmosphere in the form of cosmic rays.

The amount of radio waves one of the galactic bubbles generates suggests that the source of the X-ray emission is electrons swirling around the magnetic fields of the shock waves on the rim of the bubble. A process called synchrotron radiation radiates the electrons. The researchers’ observations present the first direct evidence of synchrotron radiation in high energy X-rays from a massive galactic bubble.

The researchers detected the radio emission on both sides of the bubble, but detected the hard X-ray emission only on the southwest side.

It is strange that the northeast side, which is brighter in every other wavelength (radio, h-alpha, soft X-ray), is not detected in hard X-ray, says Jiangtao Li, assistant research scientist in the astronomy department at the University of Michigan. It is not yet understood why the researchers have not detected synchrotron emission from the other bubble.

The new research appears in the Astrophysical Journal.

Source: University of Michigan

The post Do cosmic rays come from galactic bubbles? appeared first on Futurity.

More from Futurity

Futurity3 min read
Young Heavy Drinkers Cut Alcohol Use During Pandemic
A new study finds heavy-drinking young adults decreased alcohol intake during the pandemic. The researchers found alcohol use and alcohol-related problems substantially decreased in heavy-drinking young adults during the pandemic, and these decreases
Futurity4 min read
Alzheimer’s Moves Faster In People With Down Syndrome
A new study shows that Alzheimer’s disease both starts earlier and moves faster in people with Down syndrome, The finding may have important implications for the treatment and care of this vulnerable group of patients. Nearly all adults with Down syn
Futurity5 min read
Why Saber Tooth Cats Kept Their Baby Teeth
Analysis suggests the baby teeth of saber tooth cats stayed in place for years to stabilize the growing permanent saber tooth, perhaps allowing adolescents to learn how to hunt without breaking them. The fearsome, saber-like teeth of Smilodon fatalis

Related Books & Audiobooks