Self-confinement of relativistic pair beams in magnetized interstellar plasmas: the case of pulsar X-ray filaments
Luca Orusa, Lorenzo Sironi

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates through kinetic simulations that charge-neutral pair beams can spontaneously generate a net current in magnetized interstellar plasmas, leading to magnetic turbulence that explains observed X-ray filaments near pulsars.
Contribution
It reveals a novel mechanism where charge-neutral pair beams produce a net current, driving magnetic turbulence and particle self-confinement in pulsar environments.
Findings
Beam electrons focus into magnetic filaments via Weibel instability.
Positrons remain unconfined, creating a net current.
Magnetic turbulence enhances particle scattering and confinement.
Abstract
The observation of filamentary X-ray structures near bow-shock pulsar wind nebulae (PWNe) -- such as the Guitar, Lighthouse, and PSR J20304415 nebulae -- and of slow-diffusion regions around pulsars like Geminga, Monogem, and PSR J06223749, challenges the standard picture of cosmic-ray transport in the interstellar medium, implying a diffusion coefficient two orders of magnitude smaller than the Galactic average. The suppressed diffusion can be attributed to self-generated magnetic turbulence, driven -- via the non-resonant streaming instability -- by electron--positron pairs escaping the PWNe. This instability requires a net current, yet the beam of escaping pairs is expected to be charge-neutral. We show that a charge-neutral pair beam propagating through an electron--proton plasma can spontaneously generate a net current. Using fully kinetic two- and three-dimensional…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Dust and Plasma Wave Phenomena
