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30 pages, 25151 KiB  
Article
Prospects for Multimessenger Observations of the Shapley Supercluster
by Valentyna Babur, Olexandr Gugnin and Bohdan Hnatyk
Universe 2025, 11(7), 239; https://doi.org/10.3390/universe11070239 - 21 Jul 2025
Viewed by 238
Abstract
The Shapley Supercluster, one of the largest and most massive structures in the nearby (redshift z0.1) Universe, located approximately 200 Mpc away, is a unique laboratory for high-energy astrophysics. Galaxy clusters that comprise it are promising targets for multimessenger study [...] Read more.
The Shapley Supercluster, one of the largest and most massive structures in the nearby (redshift z0.1) Universe, located approximately 200 Mpc away, is a unique laboratory for high-energy astrophysics. Galaxy clusters that comprise it are promising targets for multimessenger study due to the presence in the intracluster medium of the necessary conditions for the acceleration of cosmic rays up to ultra-high energies and the generation by them of non-thermal electromagnetic and neutrino emission. Using the Shapley Supercluster’s observational data from the recent eROSITA-DE Data Release, we recover the physical parameters of 45 X-ray luminous galaxy clusters and calculate the expected multiwavelength—from radio to very-high-energy γ-ray as well as neutrino emission, with a particular focus on hadronic interactions of accelerated cosmic ray nuclei with the nuclei of the intracluster medium. The results obtained allow verification of cluster models based on multimessenger observations of clusters, especially in γ-ray (Fermi-LAT, H.E.S.S., CTAO-South for the Shapley Supercluster case), and neutrino (Ice Cube, KM3NeT). We also estimate the ability of the Shapley Supercluster to manifest as cosmic Zevatrons and show that it can contribute to the PAO Hot Spot in the Cen A region at UHECR energies over 50 EeV. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Ultra-High-Energy Cosmic Rays)
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22 pages, 1173 KiB  
Article
Galactic Cosmic Ray Interaction with the Perseus Giant Molecular Cloud Using Geant4 Monte Carlo Simulation
by Luan Torres and Luiz Augusto Stuani Pereira
Universe 2025, 11(7), 218; https://doi.org/10.3390/universe11070218 - 2 Jul 2025
Viewed by 372
Abstract
Galactic cosmic rays (GCRs), composed of protons and atomic nuclei, are accelerated in sources such as supernova remnants and pulsar wind nebulae, reaching energies up to the PeV range. As they propagate through the interstellar medium, their interactions with dense regions like molecular [...] Read more.
Galactic cosmic rays (GCRs), composed of protons and atomic nuclei, are accelerated in sources such as supernova remnants and pulsar wind nebulae, reaching energies up to the PeV range. As they propagate through the interstellar medium, their interactions with dense regions like molecular clouds produce secondary particles, including gamma-rays and neutrinos. In this study, we use the Geant4 Monte Carlo toolkit to simulate secondary particle production from GCR interactions within the Perseus molecular cloud, a nearby star-forming region. Our model incorporates realistic cloud composition, a wide range of incidence angles, and both hadronic and electromagnetic processes across a broad energy spectrum. The results highlight molecular clouds as significant sites of multi-messenger emissions and contribute to understanding the propagation of GCRs and the origin of diffuse gamma-ray and neutrino backgrounds in the Galaxy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Ultra-High Energy Cosmic Rays: Past, Present and Future)
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19 pages, 2592 KiB  
Article
Investigating the Variation and Periodicity of TXS 0506+056
by Xianglin Miao and Yunguo Jiang
Universe 2025, 11(7), 204; https://doi.org/10.3390/universe11070204 - 23 Jun 2025
Viewed by 267
Abstract
TXS 0506+056 is a blazar associated with neutrino events. The study on its variation mechanics and periodicity analysis is meaningful to understand other BL Lac objects. The local cross-correlation function (LCCF) analysis presents a 3σ correlation in both the γ-ray versus [...] Read more.
TXS 0506+056 is a blazar associated with neutrino events. The study on its variation mechanics and periodicity analysis is meaningful to understand other BL Lac objects. The local cross-correlation function (LCCF) analysis presents a 3σ correlation in both the γ-ray versus optical and optical versus radio light curves. The time lag analysis suggests that the optical and γ-ray band share the same emission region, located upstream of the radio band in the jet. We use both the weighted wavelet Z-transform and generalized Lomb–Scargle methods to analyze the periodicity. We find two plausible quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) at 50656+133 days and 1757+15 days for the light curve of the optical band. For the γ-ray band, we find that the spectrum varies with the softer when brighter (SWB) trend, which could be explained naturally if a stable very high energy component exists. For the optical band, TXS 0506+056 exhibits a harder when brighter (HWB) trend. We discover a trend transition from HWB to SWB in the X-ray band, which could be modeled by the shift in peak frequency assuming that the X-ray emission is composed of the synchrotron and the inverse Compton (IC) components. The flux correlations of γ-ray and optical bands behave anomalously during the period of neutrino events, indicating that there are possible other hadronic components associated with neutrino. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Blazar Bursts: Theory and Observation)
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16 pages, 1496 KiB  
Article
Neuromorphic Readout for Hadron Calorimeters
by Enrico Lupi, Abhishek, Max Aehle, Muhammad Awais, Alessandro Breccia, Riccardo Carroccio, Long Chen, Abhijit Das, Andrea De Vita, Tommaso Dorigo, Nicolas Ralph Gauger, Ralf Keidel, Jan Kieseler, Anders Mikkelsen, Federico Nardi, Xuan Tung Nguyen, Fredrik Sandin, Kylian Schmidt, Pietro Vischia and Joseph Willmore
Particles 2025, 8(2), 52; https://doi.org/10.3390/particles8020052 - 1 May 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 835
Abstract
We simulate hadrons impinging on a homogeneous lead tungstate (PbWO4) calorimeter using GEANT4 software to investigate how the resulting light yield and its temporal structure, as detected by an array of light-sensitive sensors, can be processed by a neuromorphic computing [...] Read more.
We simulate hadrons impinging on a homogeneous lead tungstate (PbWO4) calorimeter using GEANT4 software to investigate how the resulting light yield and its temporal structure, as detected by an array of light-sensitive sensors, can be processed by a neuromorphic computing system. Our model encodes temporal photon distributions as spike trains and employs a fully connected spiking neural network to estimate the total deposited energy, as well as the position and spatial distribution of the light emissions within the sensitive material. The extracted primitives offer valuable topological information about the shower development in the material, achieved without requiring a segmentation of the active medium. A potential nanophotonic implementation using III-V semiconductor nanowires is discussed. It can be both fast and energy efficient. Full article
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14 pages, 732 KiB  
Article
A System Size Analysis of the Fireball Produced in Heavy-Ion Collisions
by Egor Nedorezov, Alexey Aparin, Alexandru Parvan and Vinh Ba Luong
Particles 2025, 8(1), 34; https://doi.org/10.3390/particles8010034 - 19 Mar 2025
Viewed by 418
Abstract
One of the main interests of high-energy physics is the study of the phase diagram and the localization of phase transitions from hadronic to quark–gluonic matter. There are different techniques to study the hot matter. One of them is femtoscopy, which uses two-particle [...] Read more.
One of the main interests of high-energy physics is the study of the phase diagram and the localization of phase transitions from hadronic to quark–gluonic matter. There are different techniques to study the hot matter. One of them is femtoscopy, which uses two-particle correlations to extract spatiotemporal characteristics of the emission source. Another approach involves obtaining thermodynamic parameters from the momentum distributions of produced particles based on various theoretical models. In this research, we perform a comparative analysis of femtoscopic volumes and volumes obtained using the Tsallis statistical fit. This analysis allows us to estimate system size at the time of kinetic freeze-out and its dependence on collision centrality and energy. We observe that at high energies, the volume values estimated taking the two approaches diverge significantly, while at low energies, they are more consistent. In the future, these results can help to combine these two different methods and provide a more comprehensive picture of the fireball produced in heavy-ion collisions. Full article
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19 pages, 3178 KiB  
Review
Exploring the Components of Cosmogenic UHECR, Neutrino, and Diffuse Gamma Ray from High-Energy Astrophysical Objects
by Fangsheng Min, Hong Lu and Yiqing Guo
Galaxies 2024, 12(6), 77; https://doi.org/10.3390/galaxies12060077 - 18 Nov 2024
Viewed by 1055
Abstract
The development of multimessenger astrophysics allows us to probe various background particles from the distant early universe. Up to now, much effort has been made researching the emission and radiation of diverse steady or transient astrophysical sources. We review the potential accelerating, escaping, [...] Read more.
The development of multimessenger astrophysics allows us to probe various background particles from the distant early universe. Up to now, much effort has been made researching the emission and radiation of diverse steady or transient astrophysical sources. We review the potential accelerating, escaping, propagating, and radiation process of high-energy particles under specific circumstances for regular astrophysical sources and briefly discuss the underlying contribution from their emissions to the intensity of ultrahigh-energy cosmic ray, TeV-PeV cosmic neutrino, and the diffuse gamma-ray background, aiming to find a possible common origin. Full article
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35 pages, 7319 KiB  
Article
Searching for Hadronic Signatures in the Time Domain of Blazar Emission: The Case of Mrk 501
by Margaritis Chatzis, Stamatios I. Stathopoulos, Maria Petropoulou and Georgios Vasilopoulos
Universe 2024, 10(10), 392; https://doi.org/10.3390/universe10100392 - 10 Oct 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1027
Abstract
Blazars—a subclass of active galaxies—are intrinsically time-variable broadband sources of electromagnetic radiation. In this contribution, we explored relativistic proton (hadronic) signatures in the time domain blazar emission and searched for those parameter combinations that unveil their presence during flaring epochs. We generated time [...] Read more.
Blazars—a subclass of active galaxies—are intrinsically time-variable broadband sources of electromagnetic radiation. In this contribution, we explored relativistic proton (hadronic) signatures in the time domain blazar emission and searched for those parameter combinations that unveil their presence during flaring epochs. We generated time series for key model parameters, like magnetic field strength and the power-law index of radiating particles, which were motivated from a simulated time series with statistical properties describing the observed GeV gamma-ray flux. We chose the TeV blazar Mrk 501 as our test case, as it had been the study ground for extensive investigations during individual flaring events. Using the code LeHaMoC, we computed the electromagnetic and neutrino emissions for a period of several years that contained several flares of interest. We show that for both of those particle distributions the power-law index variations that were tied to moderate changes in the magnetic field strength of the emitting region might naturally lead to hard X-ray flares with very-high-energy γ-ray counterparts. We found spectral differences measurable by the Cherenkov Telescope Array Observatory at sub-TeV energies, and we computed the neutrino fluence over 14.5 years. The latter predicted ∼0.2 muon and anti-muon neutrinos, consistent with the non-detection of high-energy neutrinos from Mrk 501. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Blazar Bursts: Theory and Observation)
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8 pages, 285 KiB  
Article
Implications of the Spin-Induced Accretion Disk Truncation on the X-ray Binary Broadband Emission
by Theodora Papavasileiou, Odysseas Kosmas and Theocharis Kosmas
Particles 2024, 7(4), 879-886; https://doi.org/10.3390/particles7040052 - 1 Oct 2024
Viewed by 1208
Abstract
Black hole X-ray binary systems consist of a black hole accreting mass from its binary companion, forming an accretion disk. As a result, twin relativistic plasma ejections (jets) are launched towards opposite and perpendicular directions. Moreover, multiple broadband emission observations from X-ray binary [...] Read more.
Black hole X-ray binary systems consist of a black hole accreting mass from its binary companion, forming an accretion disk. As a result, twin relativistic plasma ejections (jets) are launched towards opposite and perpendicular directions. Moreover, multiple broadband emission observations from X-ray binary systems range from radio to high-energy gamma rays. The emission mechanisms exhibit thermal origins from the disk, stellar companion, and non-thermal jet-related components (i.e., synchrotron emission, inverse comptonization of less energetic photons, etc.). In many attempts at fitting the emitted spectra, a static black hole is often assumed regarding the accretion disk modeling, ignoring the Kerr metric properties that significantly impact the geometry around the usually rotating black hole. In this work, we study the possible implications of the spin inclusion in predictions of the X-ray binary spectrum. We mainly focus on the most significant aspect inserted by the Kerr geometry, the innermost stable circular orbit radius dictating the disk’s inner boundary. The outcome suggests a higher-peaked and hardened X-ray spectrum from the accretion disk and a substantial increase in the inverse Compton component of disk-originated photons. Jet-photon absorption is also heavily affected at higher energy regimes dominated by hadron-induced emission mechanisms. Nevertheless, a complete investigation requires the full examination of the spin contribution and the resulting relativistic effects beyond the disk truncation. Full article
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13 pages, 324 KiB  
Article
Galactic Stellar Black Hole Binaries: Spin Effects on Jet Emissions of High-Energy Gamma-Rays
by Dimitrios Rarras, Theocharis Kosmas, Theodora Papavasileiou and Odysseas Kosmas
Particles 2024, 7(3), 792-804; https://doi.org/10.3390/particles7030046 - 3 Sep 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1755
Abstract
In the last few decades, galactic stellar black hole X-ray binary systems (BHXRBs) have aroused intense observational and theoretical research efforts specifically focusing on their multi-messenger emissions (radio waves, X-rays, γ-rays, neutrinos, etc.). In this work, we investigate jet emissions of high-energy [...] Read more.
In the last few decades, galactic stellar black hole X-ray binary systems (BHXRBs) have aroused intense observational and theoretical research efforts specifically focusing on their multi-messenger emissions (radio waves, X-rays, γ-rays, neutrinos, etc.). In this work, we investigate jet emissions of high-energy neutrinos and gamma-rays created through several hadronic and leptonic processes taking place within the jets. We pay special attention to the effect of the black hole’s spin (Kerr black holes) on the differential fluxes of photons originating from synchrotron emission and inverse Compton scattering and specifically on their absorption due to the accretion disk’s black-body radiation. The black hole’s spin (dimensionless spin parameter a*) enters into the calculations through the radius of the innermost circular orbit around the black hole, the RISCO parameter, assumed to be the inner radius of the accretion disk, which determines its optical depth τdisk. In our results, the differential photon fluxes after the absorption effect are depicted as a function of the photon energy in the range 1GeV E103GeV. It is worth noting that when the black holes’ spin (α*) increases, the differential photon flux becomes significantly lower. Full article
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39 pages, 1973 KiB  
Review
Exotic Tetraquarks at the HL-LHC with JETHAD: A High-Energy Viewpoint
by Francesco Giovanni Celiberto
Symmetry 2024, 16(5), 550; https://doi.org/10.3390/sym16050550 - 2 May 2024
Cited by 10 | Viewed by 1524
Abstract
We review the semi-inclusive hadroproduction of a neutral hidden-flavor tetraquark with light and heavy quark flavor at the HL-LHC, accompanied by another heavy hadron or a light-flavored jet. We make use of the novel TQHL1.0 determinations of leading-twist fragmentation functions to describe the [...] Read more.
We review the semi-inclusive hadroproduction of a neutral hidden-flavor tetraquark with light and heavy quark flavor at the HL-LHC, accompanied by another heavy hadron or a light-flavored jet. We make use of the novel TQHL1.0 determinations of leading-twist fragmentation functions to describe the formation mechanism of a tetraquark state within the next-to-leading order perturbative QCD. This framework builds on the basis of a spin physics-inspired model, taken as a proxy for the lowest-scale input of the constituent heavy-quark fragmentation channel. Then, all parton-to-tetraquark fragmentation functions are consistently obtained via the above-threshold DGLAP evolution in a variable-flavor number scheme. We provide predictions for a series of differential distributions calculated by the hands of the JETHAD method, well-adapted to NLL/NLO+ hybrid-factorization studies, where the resummation of next-to-leading energy logarithms and beyond is included in the collinear picture. We provide corroborating evidence that high-energy observables sensitive to semi-inclusive tetraquark emissions at the HL-LHC exhibit a fair stability under radiative corrections, as well as MHOU studies. Our analysis constitutes a prime contact point between QCD resummations and the exotic matter. Full article
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23 pages, 549 KiB  
Article
Quark Clusters, QCD Vacuum and the Cosmological 7Li, Dark Matter and Dark Energy Problems
by Rachid Ouyed, Denis Leahy, Nico Koning and Prashanth Jaikumar
Universe 2024, 10(3), 115; https://doi.org/10.3390/universe10030115 - 1 Mar 2024
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 1630
Abstract
We propose a non-exotic electromagnetic solution (within the standard model of particle physics) to the cosmological 7Li problem based upon a narrow 2 MeV photo-emission line from the decay of light glueballs (LGBs). These LGBs form within color superconducting quark clusters (SQCs), [...] Read more.
We propose a non-exotic electromagnetic solution (within the standard model of particle physics) to the cosmological 7Li problem based upon a narrow 2 MeV photo-emission line from the decay of light glueballs (LGBs). These LGBs form within color superconducting quark clusters (SQCs), which are tens of Fermi in size, in the radiation-dominated post-BBN epoch. The mono-chromatic line from the LGBγ+γ decay reduces Big Bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) 7Be by 2/3 without affecting other abundances or the cosmic microwave background (CMB) physics, provided the combined mass of the SQCs is greater than the total baryonic mass in the universe. Following the LGB emission, the in-SQC Quantum ChromoDynamics (QCD) vacuum becomes unstable and “leaks” (via quantum tunneling) into the external space-time (trivial) vacuum, inducing a decoupling of SQCs from hadrons. In seeking a solution to the 7Li problem, we uncovered a solution that also addresses the Dark Energy (DE) and dark matter (DM) problem, making these critical problems intertwined in our model. Being colorless, charge-neutral, optically thin, and transparent to hadrons, SQCs interact only gravitationally, making them a viable cold DM (CDM) candidate. The leakage (i.e., quantum tunneling) of the in-SQC QCD vacuum to the trivial vacuum offers an explanation of DE in our model and allows for a cosmology that evolves into a ΛCDM universe at a low redshift with a possible resolution of the Hubble tension. Our model distinguishes itself by proposing that the QCD vacuum within SQCs possesses the ability to tunnel into the exterior trivial vacuum, resulting in the generation of DE. This implies the possibility that DM and hadrons might represent distinct phases of quark matter within the framework of QCD, characterized by different vacuum properties. We discuss SQC formation in heavy-ion collision experiments at moderate temperatures and the possibility of detection of MeV photons from the LGBγ+γ decay. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Cosmology)
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41 pages, 1882 KiB  
Article
Exploring Semi-Inclusive Two-Nucleon Emission in Neutrino Scattering: A Factorized Approximation Approach
by Victor L. Martinez-Consentino and Jose E. Amaro
Symmetry 2024, 16(2), 247; https://doi.org/10.3390/sym16020247 - 17 Feb 2024
Viewed by 1611
Abstract
The semi-inclusive cross-section of two-nucleon emission induced by neutrinos and antineutrinos is computed by employing the relativistic mean field model of nuclear matter and the dynamics of meson-exchange currents. Within this model, we explore a factorization approximation based on the product of an [...] Read more.
The semi-inclusive cross-section of two-nucleon emission induced by neutrinos and antineutrinos is computed by employing the relativistic mean field model of nuclear matter and the dynamics of meson-exchange currents. Within this model, we explore a factorization approximation based on the product of an integrated two-hole spectral function and a two-nucleon cross-section averaged over hole pairs. We demonstrate that the integrated spectral function of the uncorrelated Fermi gas can be analytically computed, and we derive a simple, fully relativistic formula for this function, showcasing its dependency solely on both missing momentum and missing energy. A prescription for the average momenta of the two holes in the factorized two-nucleon cross-section is provided, assuming that these momenta are perpendicular to the missing momentum in the center-of-mass system. The validity of the factorized approach is assessed by comparing it with the unfactorized calculation. Our investigation includes the study of the semi-inclusive cross-section integrated over the energy of one of the emitted nucleons and the cross-section integrated over the emission angles of the two nucleons and the outgoing muon kinematics. A comparison is made with the pure phase-space model and other models from the literature. The results of this analysis offer valuable insights into the influence of the semi-inclusive hadronic tensor on the cross-section, providing a deeper understanding of the underlying nuclear processes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Physics)
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12 pages, 441 KiB  
Article
Femtoscopy with Lévy Sources from SPS through RHIC to LHC
by Máté Csanád and Dániel Kincses
Universe 2024, 10(2), 54; https://doi.org/10.3390/universe10020054 - 23 Jan 2024
Cited by 13 | Viewed by 1840
Abstract
Femtoscopy is a unique tool to investigate the space-time geometry of the matter created in ultra-relativistic collisions. If the probability density distribution of hadron emission is parametrized, then the dependence of its parameters on particle momentum, collision energy, and collision geometry can be [...] Read more.
Femtoscopy is a unique tool to investigate the space-time geometry of the matter created in ultra-relativistic collisions. If the probability density distribution of hadron emission is parametrized, then the dependence of its parameters on particle momentum, collision energy, and collision geometry can be given. In recent years, several measurements came to light that indicated the adequacy of assuming a Lévy-stable shape for the mentioned distribution. In parallel, several new phenomenological developments appeared, aiding the interpretation of the experimental results or providing tools for the measurements. In this paper, we discuss important aspects of femtoscopy with Lévy sources in light of some of these advances, including phenomenological and experimental ones. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Multiparticle Dynamics)
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13 pages, 480 KiB  
Article
A Lepton–Hadron Model for the Multi-Wavelength Emission from Extreme High-Frequency Peaked BL Lacertae 1ES 1218+304
by Wenjing Dong, Qian Dong and Yonggang Zheng
Galaxies 2024, 12(1), 2; https://doi.org/10.3390/galaxies12010002 - 29 Dec 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2117
Abstract
We develop a lepton–hadron model for the possible origin of hard very high energy (VHE) spectra from a distant blazar. The model includes synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) and hadronic components. The lepton components include synchrotron radiation and inverse Compton scattering of relativistic electrons. For [...] Read more.
We develop a lepton–hadron model for the possible origin of hard very high energy (VHE) spectra from a distant blazar. The model includes synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) and hadronic components. The lepton components include synchrotron radiation and inverse Compton scattering of relativistic electrons. For the hadronic components, we consider proton synchrotron radiation and investigate the interaction of protons with the synchrotron emission soft photons or cosmic microwave background (CMB) photons. Upon adopting the parametrization of the observed spectrum of 1ES 1218+304, we obtain the following results: (1) the model is able to match the spectral energy distribution of 1ES 1218+304; (2) we find that in Ep10101017eV, the π0γ-ray process contributes the majority of the secondary photons; and (3) the interaction of protons with the low-energy photons may occur in or outside the jet. Full article
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15 pages, 419 KiB  
Article
Integral Fluxes of Neutrinos and Gamma-Rays Emitted from Neighboring X-ray Binaries
by Odysseas Kosmas, Theodora Papavasileiou and Theocharis Kosmas
Universe 2023, 9(12), 517; https://doi.org/10.3390/universe9120517 - 15 Dec 2023
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 1985
Abstract
Astrophysical plasma ejections (jets) are formed and powered by black holes that accrete material from their companion star in binary systems. Black hole X-ray binary systems constitute potential powerful galactic and extragalactic neutrino and gamma-ray sources. After being accelerated to highly relativistic velocities [...] Read more.
Astrophysical plasma ejections (jets) are formed and powered by black holes that accrete material from their companion star in binary systems. Black hole X-ray binary systems constitute potential powerful galactic and extragalactic neutrino and gamma-ray sources. After being accelerated to highly relativistic velocities and subjected to various energy-consuming interactions, the lepto-hadronic content of the jets produces secondary particles such as pions and muons that decay to gamma-ray photons and neutrinos heading towards the Earth. In this work, we employ a jet emission model in order to predict the neutrino and gamma-ray integral fluxes emanating from some of the most investigated and prominent stellar black hole X-ray binary systems in the Milky Way, such as GRO J1655-40, Cygnus X-1, SS 433, and GRS 1915+105. For the sake of comparison, we also include an extragalactic system, namely, LMC X-1, located in the Large Magellanic Cloud. For the case of gamma-ray emissions, we also include absorption effects due to X-ray emission from the accretion disk and the black hole corona, as well as ultraviolet (UV) emission from the binary system’s companion star. Full article
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