Beaming of particles and synchrotron radiation in relativistic magnetic reconnection
Daniel Kagan, Ehud Nakar, Tsvi Piran

TL;DR
This study uses 2D PIC simulations to reveal that particle and radiation beaming in relativistic magnetic reconnection differ from idealized models, with implications for astrophysical phenomena like GRBs and AGNs.
Contribution
It provides a new detailed picture of particle and radiation beaming in relativistic reconnection, challenging previous assumptions of bulk relativistic outflows and isotropic electron velocities.
Findings
Particles in X-points are beamed within about 5/gamma.
Radiation from fast-cooling particles at X-points is highly beamed and exceeds 100 MeV.
Isotropization occurs after particles reach magnetic islands, reducing beaming.
Abstract
Relativistic reconnection has been invoked as a mechanism for particle acceleration in numerous astrophysical systems. According to idealised analytical models reconnection produces a bulk relativistic outflow emerging from the reconnection sites (X-points). The resulting radiation is therefore highly beamed. Using two-dimensional particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations, we investigate particle and radiation beaming, finding a very different picture. Instead of having a relativistic average bulk motion with isotropic electron velocity distribution in its rest frame, we find that the bulk motion of particles in X-points is similar to their Lorentz factor gamma, and the particles are beamed within about 5/gamma. On the way from the X-point to the magnetic islands, particles turn in the magnetic field, forming a fan confined to the current sheet. Once they reach the islands they isotropise…
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