Particle Acceleration in Relativistic Magnetized Collisionless Electron-Ion Shocks
Lorenzo Sironi, Anatoly Spitkovsky (Princeton University)

TL;DR
This study uses particle-in-cell simulations to analyze shock structures and particle acceleration mechanisms in relativistic magnetized electron-ion shocks, revealing conditions for efficient acceleration and heating relevant to astrophysical phenomena.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how magnetic field inclination and magnetization affect particle acceleration and heating in relativistic shocks through detailed simulations.
Findings
Efficient ion acceleration occurs in subluminal shocks with a power-law tail slope of -2.1.
Electrons are mostly heated but only a small fraction are accelerated to nonthermal energies.
Superluminal shocks produce thermal spectra with strong electron heating but limited nonthermal acceleration.
Abstract
We investigate shock structure and particle acceleration in relativistic magnetized collisionless electron-ion shocks by means of 2.5D particle-in-cell simulations with ion-to-electron mass ratios (m_i/m_e) ranging from 16 to 1000. We explore a range of inclination angles between the pre-shock magnetic field and the shock normal. In "subluminal" shocks, where relativistic particles can escape ahead of the shock along the magnetic field lines, ions are efficiently accelerated via a Fermi-like mechanism. The downstream ion spectrum consists of a relativistic Maxwellian and a high-energy power-law tail, which contains ~5% of ions and ~30% of ion energy. Its slope is -2.1. Upstream electrons enter the shock with lower energy than ions, so they are more strongly tied to the field. As a result, only ~1% of the incoming electrons are Fermi-accelerated at the shock before being advected…
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