The theory of resonant cosmic ray-driven instabilities -- Growth and saturation of single modes
Rouven Lemmerz, Mohamad Shalaby, Christoph Pfrommer, Timon, Thomas

TL;DR
This paper develops a first-principles theory of cosmic ray-driven instabilities, explaining wave growth, saturation, and back-reaction, validated by kinetic simulations, with implications for galaxy and cluster feedback models.
Contribution
It introduces a novel theoretical framework for CR-driven instabilities based on particle gyrophase dynamics, supported by kinetic simulations, challenging existing CR transport models.
Findings
Wave growth linked to CR gyrophase bunching
Instability saturation occurs without isotropization of CRs
Simulations confirm the theory's predictions of mode evolution
Abstract
Cosmic ray (CR) feedback is critical for galaxy formation as CRs drive galactic winds, regularize star formation in galaxies, and escape from active galactic nuclei to heat the cooling cores of galaxy clusters. The feedback strength of CRs depends on their coupling to the background plasma and, as such, on the effective CR transport speed. Traditionally, this has been hypothesized to depend on the balance between wave growth of CR-driven instabilities and their damping. Here, we study the physics of CR-driven instabilities from first principles, starting from a gyrotropic distribution of CR ions that stream along a background magnetic field. We develop a theory of the underlying processes that organize the particles' orbits and in particular their gyrophases, which provides an intuitive physical picture of (i) wave growth as the CR gyrophases start to bunch up lopsidedly towards the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics
