The interplay of magnetically-dominated turbulence and magnetic reconnection in producing nonthermal particles
Luca Comisso, Lorenzo Sironi

TL;DR
This study uses kinetic simulations to explore how turbulence and magnetic reconnection in magnetically-dominated plasmas produce nonthermal particles, revealing a two-stage acceleration process and its implications for astrophysical sources.
Contribution
It demonstrates the interplay between turbulence and reconnection in particle acceleration, highlighting the roles of electric fields and stochastic scattering in generating nonthermal spectra.
Findings
Power-law particle spectra with slopes as hard as p<2.
Particle acceleration timescales are fast, scaling as (3/σ)l/c.
Reconnection and turbulence jointly shape particle energy and pitch-angle distributions.
Abstract
Magnetized turbulence and magnetic reconnection are often invoked to explain the nonthermal emission observed from a wide variety of astrophysical sources. By means of fully-kinetic 2D and 3D PIC simulations, we investigate the interplay between turbulence and reconnection in generating nonthermal particles in magnetically-dominated pair plasmas. A generic by-product of the turbulence evolution is the generation of a nonthermal particle spectrum with a power-law energy range. The power-law slope is harder for larger magnetizations and stronger turbulence fluctuations, and it can be as hard as . The Larmor radius of particles at the high-energy cutoff is comparable to the size of the largest eddies. Plasmoid-mediated reconnection, which self-consistently occurs in the turbulent plasma, controls the physics of particle injection. Then, particles are further accelerated by…
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