The effect of cooling on particle trajectories and acceleration in relativistic magnetic reconnection
Daniel Kagan, Ehud Nakar, and Tsvi Piran

TL;DR
This study uses particle-in-cell simulations to show that cooling does not limit particle acceleration or the resulting synchrotron radiation spectrum in relativistic magnetic reconnection, even above the burnoff limit.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that cooling effects are negligible for particle acceleration spectra in relativistic reconnection, challenging previous assumptions about the synchrotron burnoff limit.
Findings
Cooling does not significantly alter particle energy spectra above the burnoff limit.
The synchrotron burnoff limit does not produce a cutoff in the particle energy spectrum.
The TPC method accurately predicts cooling effects in relativistic reconnection.
Abstract
The maximum synchrotron burnoff limit of 160 MeV represents a fundamental limit to radiation resulting from electromagnetic particle acceleration in one-zone ideal plasmas. In magnetic reconnection, however, particle acceleration and radiation are decoupled because the electric field is larger than the magnetic field in the diffusion region. We carry out two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations to determine the extent to which magnetic reconnection can produce synchrotron radiation above the burnoff limit. We use the test particle comparison (TPC) method to isolate the effects of cooling by comparing the trajectories and acceleration efficiencies of test particles incident on such a reconnection region with and without cooling them. We find that the cooled and uncooled particle trajectories are typically similar during acceleration in the reconnection region, and derive an effective…
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