Dissipation of the striped pulsar wind
Beno\^it Cerutti, Alexander A. Philippov

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to analyze how magnetic energy dissipates in the striped pulsar wind, revealing the process's efficiency and implications for pulsar emissions.
Contribution
It provides new insights into magnetic dissipation mechanisms in pulsar winds through large-scale particle-in-cell simulations of oblique rotators.
Findings
Current sheet fragments into magnetic islands and thin current sheets.
Magnetic energy decreases as reconnection progresses.
Particles are efficiently heated, producing pulsed synchrotron emission.
Abstract
Rapidly rotating neutron stars blow a relativistic, magnetized wind mainly composed of electron-positron pairs. The free expansion of the wind terminates far from the neutron star where a weakly magnetized pulsar wind nebula forms, implying efficient magnetic dissipation somewhere upstream. The wind current sheet that separates the two magnetic polarities is usually considered as the most natural place for magnetic dissipation via relativistic reconnection, but its efficiency remains an open question. Here, the goal of this work is to revisit this issue in light of the most recent progress in the understanding of reconnection and pulsar electrodynamics. We perform large two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations of the oblique rotator to capture the multi-scale evolution of the wind. We find that the current sheet breaks up into a dynamical chain of magnetic islands separated by…
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