The Maximum Energy of Accelerated Particles in Relativistic Collisionless Shocks
Lorenzo Sironi, Anatoly Spitkovsky, Jonathan Arons

TL;DR
This study uses particle-in-cell simulations to determine the maximum energy particles can reach in relativistic collisionless shocks, revealing how magnetization influences acceleration efficiency and energy limits relevant to gamma-ray burst afterglows.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how magnetization affects particle acceleration and maximum energy scaling in relativistic shocks through detailed simulations.
Findings
Efficient acceleration occurs at sigma<1e-3 for electron-positron plasmas.
Maximum particle energy scales as t^(1/2), shallower than Bohm limit.
Energy saturation scales with sigma^(-1/4), confined by turbulence region.
Abstract
The afterglow emission from gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) is usually interpreted as synchrotron radiation from electrons accelerated at the GRB external shock, that propagates with relativistic velocities into the magnetized interstellar medium. By means of multi-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations, we investigate the acceleration performance of weakly magnetized relativistic shocks, in the magnetization range 0<sigma<1e-1. The pre-shock magnetic field is orthogonal to the flow, as generically expected for relativistic shocks. We find that relativistic perpendicular shocks propagating in electron-positron plasmas are efficient particle accelerators if the magnetization is sigma<1e-3. For electron-ion plasmas, the transition to efficient acceleration occurs for sigma<3e-5. Here, the acceleration process proceeds similarly for the two species, since the electrons enter the shock nearly in…
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