Particle acceleration by collisionless shocks containing large-scale magnetic-field variations
F. Guo, J. R. Jokipii, J. Kota

TL;DR
This paper models how large-scale magnetic field variations influence particle acceleration at collisionless shocks, revealing the formation of hot spots and spectral modifications, which align with recent space observations.
Contribution
It introduces a numerical solution to the Parker transport equation considering large-scale magnetic variations, highlighting their impact on particle acceleration and distribution.
Findings
Magnetic field meandering creates hot spots of accelerated particles.
Large-scale magnetic variations significantly alter shock acceleration results.
Results align with Voyager observations in the Heliosheath.
Abstract
Diffusive shock acceleration at collisionless shocks is thought to be the source of many of the energetic particles observed in space. Large-scale spatial variations of the magnetic field has been shown to be important in understanding observations. The effects are complex, so here we consider a simple, illustrative model. Here, we solve numerically the Parker transport equation for a shock in the presence of large-scale sinusoidal magnetic-field variations. We demonstrate that the familiar planar-shock results can be significantly altered as a consequence of large-scale, meandering magnetic lines of force. Because perpendicular diffusion coefficient is generally much smaller than parallel diffusion coefficient , the energetic charged particles are trapped and preferentially accelerated along the shock front in the regions where the connection points of…
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