Particle Acceleration in Relativistic Electron-Ion Outlfows
Nicole M. Lloyd-Ronning (LANL), Christopher L. Fryer (LANL)

TL;DR
This study uses PIC simulations to analyze particle acceleration in relativistic electron-ion outflows, revealing the importance of realistic mass ratios and magnetic field generation for accurate modeling of astrophysical phenomena.
Contribution
It demonstrates the significant differences in particle acceleration and magnetic field generation when using realistic versus simplified mass ratios in PIC simulations.
Findings
Electron acceleration is efficient near the flow front with a power-law energy distribution.
Magnetic fields are generated ahead of and behind the flow front, with energy proportions depending on mass ratio.
Lower mass ratios produce magnetic fields further downstream and with higher energy content.
Abstract
We use the Los Alamos VPIC code to investigate particle acceleration in relativistic, unmagnetized, collisionless electron-ion plasmas. We run our simulations both with a realistic proton-to-electron mass ratio m_p/m_e = 1836, as well as commonly employed mass ratios of m_p/m_e =100 and 25, and show that results differ among the different cases. In particular, for the physically accurate mass ratio, electron acceleration occurs efficiently in a narrow region of a few hundred inertial lengths near the flow front, producing a power law dN/dgamma ~ gamma^(-p) with p ~ -2 developing over a few decades in energy, while acceleration is weak in the region far downstream. We find 20%, 10%, and 0.2% of the total energy given to the electrons for mass ratios of 25, 100, and 1836 respectively at a time of 2500 (w_p)^-1. Our simulations also show significant magnetic field generation just ahead of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectrostatic Discharge in Electronics · Pulsed Power Technology Applications · Laser-Plasma Interactions and Diagnostics
