Simulations of particle acceleration beyond the classical synchrotron burnoff limit in magnetic reconnection: An explanation of the Crab flares
Benoit Cerutti, Gregory R. Werner, Dmitri A. Uzdensky, Mitchell C., Begelman

TL;DR
This paper provides the first numerical evidence that magnetic reconnection can accelerate particles beyond the classical synchrotron burnoff limit, explaining the high-energy gamma-ray flares observed in the Crab Nebula.
Contribution
It introduces a new simulation approach with the Zeltron code, demonstrating particle acceleration beyond the synchrotron limit in reconnection regions, aligning with Crab flare observations.
Findings
Particles accelerate beyond 160 MeV in reconnection layers.
High-energy synchrotron flux is highly variable and anisotropic.
Guide magnetic fields suppress >160 MeV emission.
Abstract
It is generally accepted that astrophysical sources cannot emit synchrotron radiation above 160 MeV in their rest frame. This limit is given by the balance between the accelerating electric force and the radiation reaction force acting on the electrons. The discovery of synchrotron gamma-ray flares in the Crab Nebula, well above this limit, challenges this classical picture of particle acceleration. To overcome this limit, particles must accelerate in a region of high electric field and low magnetic field. This is possible only with a non-ideal magnetohydrodynamic process, like magnetic reconnection. We present the first numerical evidence of particle acceleration beyond the synchrotron burnoff limit, using a set of 2D particle-in-cell simulations of ultra-relativistic pair plasma reconnection. We use a new code, Zeltron, that includes self-consistently the radiation reaction force in…
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