Turbulent diffusion of streaming cosmic rays in compressible, partially ionised plasma
Matt L. Sampson, James R. Beattie, Mark R. Krumholz, Roland M., Crocker, Christoph Federrath, Amit Seta

TL;DR
This study uses magnetohydrodynamical turbulence simulations to analyze how ISM turbulence parameters influence the transport of streaming cosmic rays, revealing superdiffusion as a key process and providing empirical diffusion coefficient fits for simulations.
Contribution
It quantifies the impact of turbulence parameters on cosmic ray transport and introduces empirical fits for diffusion coefficients based on plasma conditions.
Findings
Superdiffusion is a universal feature of cosmic ray transport.
Diffusion coefficients depend on plasma parameters like Mach numbers and ionisation fraction.
Superdiffusion may explain discrepancies in observed cosmic ray diffusion scales.
Abstract
Cosmic rays (CRs) are a dynamically important component of the interstellar medium (ISM) of galaxies. The GeV CRs that carry most CR energy and pressure are likely confined by self-generated turbulence, leading them to stream along magnetic field lines at the ion Alfv\'en speed. However, the consequences of self-confinement for CR propagation on galaxy scales remain highly uncertain. In this paper, we use a large ensemble of magnetohydrodynamical turbulence simulations to quantify how the basic parameters describing ISM turbulence -- the sonic Mach number, (plasma compressibility), Alfv\'en Mach number, (strength of the large-scale field with respect to the turbulence), and ionisation fraction by mass, -- affect the transport of streaming CRs. We show that the large-scale transport of CRs whose small-scale motion consists of streaming along…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics
