학술논문

Transport parameters from AMS-02 F/Si data and fluorine source abundance
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Subject
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
Language
Abstract
The AMS-02 collaboration recently released cosmic-ray F/Si data of unprecedented accuracy. CR F is predominantly produced by fragmentation of heavier progenitors, while Si is mostly accelerated at source. This ratio is thus maximally sensitive to CR propagation. We study the compatibility of the transport parameters derived from the F/Si ratio with those obtained from the lighter Li/C, Be/C, and B/C ratios. We also inspect the CR source abundance of F, one of the few elements with a high first ionisation potential but only moderately volatile, and a potentially key element to study the acceleration mechanism of CRs. We use the 1D diffusion model implemented in the USINE code and perform $\chi^2$ analyses accounting for several systematic effects (energy correlations in data, nuclear cross sections and solar modulation uncertainties). We also take advantage of the EXFOR nuclear database to update the F production cross sections for its most important progenitors (identified to be 56Fe, 32S, 28Si, 27Al, 24Mg, 22Ne, and 20Ne). The transport parameters obtained from AMS-02 F/Si data are compatible with those obtained from AMS-02 (Li,Be,B)/C data. The combined fit of all these ratios leads to a $\chi^2/dof\approx1.1$, with $\lesssim 10\%$ adjustments of the B and F production cross sections (the latter are based on very few nuclear data points, and would strongly benefit from new measurements). The F/Si ratio is compatible with a pure secondary origin of F, with a best-fit relative source abundance 19F/28Si$_{CRS}\sim 10^{-3}$ and an upper limit of $\sim 5\times 10^{-3}$. Unfortunately, this limit is not sufficient to test global acceleration models of CR nuclei, for which values at the level of $\sim 10^{-4}$ are required. Such levels could be attained with F/Si data of a few percent accuracy at a few tens of TV, possibly within reach of the next generation of CR experiments.
Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures (including 1 new in App.), 3 tables: many clarifications, results unchanged (submitted to A&A)