Linear acceleration emission of pulsar relativistic streaming instability and interacting plasma bunches
Jan Ben\'a\v{c}ek, Patricio A. Mu\~noz, J\"org B\"uchner, and Axel, Jessner

TL;DR
This study investigates the linear acceleration emission mechanism in pulsar magnetospheres, incorporating collective and nonlinear plasma effects through simulations, revealing that plasma bunch interactions produce significantly more power than streaming instabilities.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel simulation-based analysis of plasma bunch interactions and streaming instabilities, quantifying their respective contributions to pulsar radio emission power.
Findings
Plasma bunch interactions generate up to 8 orders of magnitude more power than streaming instabilities.
A few dozen to hundreds of plasma bunches can explain the observed pulsar power if their emissions are combined coherently.
The plasma bunch spectrum features a flat low-frequency profile and a power-law high-frequency tail.
Abstract
Linear acceleration emission is one of the mechanisms that might explain intense coherent emissions of radio pulsars. This mechanism is not well understood, however, because the effects of collective plasma response and nonlinear plasma evolution on the resulting emission power must be taken into account. In addition, details of the radio emission properties of this mechanism are unknown, which limits the observational verification of the emission model. By including collective and nonlinear plasma effects, we calculate radio emission power properties by the linear acceleration emission mechanism that occurs via the antenna principle for two instabilities in neutron star magnetospheres: 1) the relativistic streaming instability, and 2) interactions of plasma bunches. We used 1D electrostatic relativistic particle-in-cell simulations to evolve the instabilities self-consistently.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
