Plasmoids in relativistic reconnection, from birth to adulthood: first they grow, then they go
L. Sironi (Harvard), D. Giannios (Purdue), M. Petropoulou (Purdue)

TL;DR
This study uses large-scale particle-in-cell simulations to show that relativistic magnetic reconnection naturally produces quasi-spherical plasmoids with high-energy particles, explaining features observed in astrophysical jets.
Contribution
It demonstrates that relativistic reconnection can self-consistently generate plasmoids with specific properties, extending understanding of their formation and growth in astrophysical plasmas.
Findings
Plasmoids are in energy equipartition between particles and magnetic fields.
Largest plasmoids reach a size ~0.2 L and contain the highest energy particles.
Plasmoid growth is initially non-relativistic, then suppressed at relativistic speeds.
Abstract
Blobs, or quasi-spherical emission regions containing relativistic particles and magnetic fields, are often assumed ad hoc in emission models of relativistic astrophysical jets, yet their physical origin is still not well understood. Here, we employ a suite of large-scale two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations in electron-positron plasmas to demonstrate that relativistic magnetic reconnection can naturally account for the formation of quasi-spherical plasmoids filled with high-energy particles and magnetic fields. Our simulations extend to unprecedentedly long temporal and spatial scales, so we can capture the asymptotic physics independently of the initial setup. We characterize the properties of the plasmoids that are continuously generated as a self-consistent by-product of the reconnection process: they are in rough energy equipartition between particles and magnetic fields;…
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