Production and persistence of extreme two-temperature plasmas in radiative relativistic turbulence
Vladimir Zhdankin, Dmitri A. Uzdensky, Matthew W. Kunz

TL;DR
This study uses particle-in-cell simulations to show that relativistic turbulence in collisionless plasmas can produce and sustain extreme two-temperature states with ions much hotter than electrons, affecting astrophysical models.
Contribution
It demonstrates that relativistic radiative turbulence can generate and maintain high ion-to-electron temperature ratios without efficient collisionless coupling mechanisms.
Findings
Ions continuously heat up while electrons cool down under turbulence and radiation.
The ion-to-electron temperature ratio can reach up to 10^3 in simulations.
Electrons form a quasi-thermal distribution, while ions undergo nonthermal acceleration.
Abstract
Turbulence is a predominant process for energizing electrons and ions in collisionless astrophysical plasmas, and thus is responsible for shaping their radiative signatures (luminosity, spectra, and variability). To better understand the kinetic properties of a collisionless radiative plasma subject to externally driven turbulence, we investigate particle-in-cell simulations of relativistic plasma turbulence with external inverse Compton cooling acting on the electrons. We find that ions continuously heat up while electrons gradually cool down (due to the net effect of radiation), and hence the ion-to-electron temperature ratio grows in time. We show that is limited only by the size and duration of the simulations (reaching ), indicating that there are no efficient collisionless mechanisms of electron-ion thermal coupling. This result has…
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