4.3 Article

On particle acceleration and transport in plasmas in the Galaxy: theory and observations

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLASMA PHYSICS
Volume 87, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0022377821000064

Keywords

astrophysical plasmas; plasma instabilities; plasma nonlinear phenomena

Funding

  1. INAF
  2. ASI through Grant SKA-CTA INAF 2016
  3. ASI through Grant INAF-MAINSTREAM 2018
  4. ASI/INAF [2017-14-H.O]
  5. National Science Foundation [NSF PHY-1748958]
  6. Polish Science Centre [DEC-2017/27/B/ST9/02272]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Accelerated particles are essential for the evolution of the Universe and have been detected in various astrophysical sources both indirectly through non-thermal radiation and directly as cosmic rays on Earth. Recent observations and theoretical studies have provided new insights into the origin and propagation of galactic cosmic rays, shedding light on their interactions with the surrounding environment.
Accelerated particles are ubiquitous in the Cosmos and play a fundamental role in many processes governing the evolution of the Universe at all scales, from the sub-AU scale relevant for the formation and evolution of stars and planets to the Mpc scale involved in Galaxy assembly. We reveal the presence of energetic particles in many classes of astrophysical sources thanks to their production of non-thermal radiation, and we detect them directly at the Earth as cosmic rays. In the last two decades both direct and indirect observations have provided us a wealth of new, high-quality data about cosmic rays and their interactions both in sources and during propagation, in the Galaxy and in the Solar System. Some of the new data have confirmed existing theories about particle acceleration and propagation and their interplay with the environment in which they occur. Some others have brought about interesting surprises, whose interpretation is not straightforward within the standard framework and may require a change of paradigm in terms of our ideas about the origin of cosmic rays of different species or in different energy ranges. In this article, we focus on cosmic rays of galactic origin, namely with energies below a few petaelectronvolts, where a steepening is observed in the spectrum of energetic particles detected at the Earth. We review the recent observational findings and the current status of the theory about the origin and propagation of galactic cosmic rays.

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