Beyond Fermi-II: Intermittent Particle Acceleration by Relativistic Turbulence in Astrophysical Plasmas
Anton Dmytriiev, Frans van der Merwe, Markus B\"ottcher

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new Monte Carlo model for particle acceleration in relativistic turbulent plasmas, capturing intermittent energization effects and explaining high-energy spectra observed in microquasars.
Contribution
The study develops STRIPE, a novel CTRW-based framework that models intermittent particle acceleration and cooling in relativistic turbulence, advancing beyond traditional Fermi-II theories.
Findings
Relativistic turbulence produces steep low-energy cutoffs in particle spectra.
High-amplitude turbulence generates hard power-law tails reaching tens of PeV.
Results align with observed TeV-PeV spectra of LHAASO microquasars.
Abstract
Stochastic particle acceleration in turbulent plasmas plays a key role in shaping high-energy emission from relativistic outflows, such as those in Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) and microquasars. While traditional Fermi-II models provide a foundational framework, they often oversimplify the complex nature of realistic magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence, especially in high-amplitude () and relativistic regimes. Recent plasma simulations for these conditions have revealed highly non-linear energization effects, such as sudden, large momentum jumps, that remain largely unexplored in astrophysical applications. We present a novel Monte Carlo framework STRIPE that models particle acceleration as a continuous-time random walk (CTRW), capturing both intermittent energy gains and radiative losses. The stochastic evolution of particle momenta is driven by jumps with random…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
