Reconnection-Powered Linear Accelerator and Gamma-Ray Flares in the Crab Nebula
Dmitri A. Uzdensky, Benoit Cerutti, and Mitchell C. Begelman

TL;DR
This paper proposes a reconnection-powered linear accelerator mechanism that explains the ultra-high-energy gamma-ray flares observed in the Crab Nebula, surpassing traditional energy limits by leveraging large-scale magnetic reconnection dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model where electrons are accelerated in reconnection sites, overcoming previous energy constraints and explaining the Crab Nebula gamma-ray flares.
Findings
Electrons can reach energies beyond 100 MeV in reconnection layers.
The model accounts for gamma-ray flares exceeding standard synchrotron limits.
Reconnection electric fields can accelerate particles efficiently in large-scale magnetic structures.
Abstract
The recent discovery of day-long gamma-ray flares in the Crab Nebula, presumed to be synchrotron emission by PeV (10^{15} eV) electrons in milligauss magnetic fields, presents a strong challenge to particle acceleration models. The observed photon energies exceed the upper limit (~100 MeV) obtained by balancing the acceleration rate and synchrotron radiation losses under standard conditions where the electric field is smaller than the magnetic field. We argue that a linear electric accelerator, operating at magnetic reconnection sites, is able to circumvent this difficulty. Sufficiently energetic electrons have gyroradii so large that their motion is insensitive to small-scale turbulent structures in the reconnection layer and is controlled only by large-scale fields. We show that such particles are guided into the reconnection layer by the reversing magnetic field as they are…
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