Particle Acceleration at Relativistic Shocks in Extragalactic Systems
Matthew G. Baring, Errol J. Summerlin

TL;DR
This paper investigates diffusive shock acceleration at relativistic shocks in extragalactic systems, using Monte Carlo simulations to explore particle distributions and their implications for cosmic rays and gamma-ray sources.
Contribution
It provides detailed simulation results of DSA at relativistic shocks, analyzing effects of magnetic field orientation and turbulence, and connects findings to gamma-ray observations.
Findings
Distribution functions follow power-law indices consistent with other methods.
Spectral indices depend on magnetic field orientation and turbulence.
Flat spectra suggest shock drift acceleration as a key process.
Abstract
Diffusive shock acceleration (DSA) at relativistic shocks is expected to be an important acceleration mechanism in a variety of astrophysical objects including extragalactic jets in active galactic nuclei and gamma ray bursts. These sources remain strong and interesting candidate sites for the generation of ultra-high energy cosmic rays. In this paper, key predictions of DSA at relativistic shocks that are salient to the issue of cosmic ray ion and electron production are outlined. Results from a Monte Carlo simulation of such diffusive acceleration in test-particle, relativistic, oblique, MHD shocks are presented. Simulation output is described for both large angle and small angle scattering scenarios, and a variety of shock obliquities including superluminal regimes when the de Hoffman-Teller frame does not exist. The distribution function power-law indices compare favorably with…
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