The energetics of relativistic magnetic reconnection: ion-electron repartition and particle distribution hardness
Micka\"el Melzani, Rolf Walder, Doris Folini, Christophe, Winisdoerffer, Jean M. Favre

TL;DR
This study uses 2D particle-in-cell simulations to analyze how magnetic energy is partitioned during relativistic magnetic reconnection, revealing the energy distribution between ions and electrons and the resulting particle energy spectra.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the energy repartition and particle acceleration mechanisms in relativistic reconnection, including the dependence on magnetization and guide field strength.
Findings
45-75% of magnetic energy converts to kinetic energy.
Ion energy share ranges from 30% to 60%.
Particle spectra can be very hard with index p=1.2 to 5.
Abstract
Collisionless magnetic reconnection is a prime candidate to account for flare-like or steady emission, outflow launching, or plasma heating, in a variety of high-energy astrophysical objects, including ones with relativistic ion-electron plasmas. But the fate of the initial magnetic energy in a reconnection event remains poorly known: what is the amount given to kinetic energy, the ion/electron repartition, and the hardness of the particle distributions? We explore these questions with 2D particle-in-cell simulations of ion-electron plasmas. We find that 45 to 75% of the total initial magnetic energy ends up in kinetic energy, this fraction increasing with the inflow magnetization. Depending on the guide field strength, ions get from 30 to 60% of the total kinetic energy. Particles can be separated into two populations that only weakly mix: (i) particles initially in the current sheet,…
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