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Particle Acceleration by Relativistic Collisionless Shocks in ElectronPositron Plasmas

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Title: Particle Acceleration by Relativistic Collisionless Shocks in ElectronPositron Plasmas


1
Particle Acceleration by Relativistic
Collisionless Shocks in Electron-Positron Plasmas
  • Graduate school of science, Osaka University
    Kentaro Nagata

2
Contents
  • Motivation
  • Observation and theory for the Crab nebula
  • Necessity of particle acceleration processes
    (not Fermi acceleration)
  • Simulation results for relativistic collisionless
    shocks in electron-positron plasmas
  • Discussion

3
Pulsar nebula
  • The pulsar nebula is brightened by the energy
    coming from the central neutron star via pulsar
    wind.
  • One of the best observed and studied pulsar
    nebula is the Crab nebula because
  • its age is known (951 years) and
  • observations are relatively easy (2kpc).

The Crab nebula in optical three bands (European
Southern Observatory)
4
Pulsar magnetosphere
  • Pulsar radius 10km
  • Magnetic field 1012G
  • Gamma rays and a strong magnetic field generate a
    lot of pair plasma
  • The light cylinder is defined by
  • rLlight speedpulsar period
  • 1500km.
  • In rltrL, the magnetosphere co-rotates and
    closes.
  • In rgtrL, the magnetosphere doesnt co-rotate
    and extends far away .

Pulsar magnetosphere (P.Goldreich and W.H.Julian,
1969)
5
Underluminous zone and shock
X-ray image of the Crab nebula (Chandra)
  • The shock is at 0.1pc from the pulsar.
  • Pair plasmas are carried along the extended
    magnetic field.
  • ?pulsar wind
  • magnetic field 310-4G
  • Lorentz factor 3106 at the shock
  • The region inside the shock is underluminous
    because the pulsar wind is still cold.
  • The magnetic field is almost toridal because the
    pulsar rotates with high frequency and the wind
    is highly relativistic.

shock
6
Nebula
  • The thermalized pulsar wind brights by means of
    synchrotron radiation.
  • Expanding filament structures suggest that the
    nebula edge expands with a velocity 2000km/s at
    2pc from the pulsar.

The Crab nebula in optical three bands (European
Southern Observatory)
7
A theoretical model (KC model)
shock(0.1pc)
(C.F.Kennel, and F.V.Coroniti, 1984)
2pc
underluminous zone
nebula
remnant
upstream
downstream
pulsar wind
2000km/s
expansion of nebula
adiabatic expansion
Rankine-Hugoniot relations
  • upstream n0,u0(g0u0),B0,P0(0cold)
  • downstream n1,u1( g11 ),B1,P1
    ?7 parameters
  • Rankine-Hugoniot relations
    ?4 equations
  • ?4 parameters
  • in 1 equation
  • One upstream parameter expresses downstream flow
    velocity and energy by ultra-relativistic
    Rankine-Hugoniot relations.

Bz0magnetic field, n0number density of
particles, g0Lorentz factor of particles
8
A theoretical model (KC model)
(C.F.Kennel, and F.V.Coroniti, 1984)
shock(0.1pc)
2pc
underluminous zone
nebula
remnant
upstream
downstream
pulsar wind
2000km/s
expansion of nebula
adiabatic expansion
Rankine-Hugoniot relations
  • Adiabatic expansion is solved by 1-D
    spherically symmetrical MHD conservation laws.
  • u(z) flow velocity
  • zdistance/(shock radius)

9
A theoretical model (KC model)
(C.F.Kennel, and F.V.Coroniti, 1984)
shock(0.1pc)
2pc
underluminous zone
nebula
remnant
upstream
downstream
pulsar wind
2000km/s
expansion of nebula
adiabatic expansion
Rankine-Hugoniot relations
  • Boundary condition
  • flow velocity at nebula edge
  • nebula expansion velocity
  • ?s310-3
  • kinetic energy dominant
  • In the same model, upstream flow energy is
    decided by comparing the theoretical spectrum
    with the observation, g0 3106.

10
Spectrum of the Crab nebula
Multi-wavelength spectrum of the Crab nebula
(Aharonian et al 1998)
?106
?109
synchrotron radiation
IC
  • The spectrum shows a non-thermal distribution
    from optical to low gamma range.
  • There must be particle acceleration processes.

11
Acceleration mechanism
  • When the magnetic field is nearly perpendicular
    to the flow, downstream particles can not go back
    to the upstream region (P.D.Hudson, 1965), and
    the Fermi acceleration doesnt work efficiently.
  • Possible other acceleration mechanisms
  • shock surfing acceleration, magnetic
    reconnection

parallel shock
perpendicular shock
upstream
upstream
downstream
downstream
magnetic field
magnetic field
Fermi acceleration
12
Shock surfing acceleration
z
y
Bz
Ey
? charge
  • Magnetized (Bz) charged particles are injected
    from upstream. Electric field (Ey) satisfies
    perfect conductivity.
  • If charged particles are trapped at the shock
    surface,
  • the Ey accelerates these particles along the
    shock surface.

? charged particles
?
x
? -charge
shock surface
Ey
Ex
Bz
4Bz
shock surface
13
The simulation scheme
  • Particle motion and electro-magnetic field are
    consistently solved by the equation of motion and
    Maxwell equations respectively.
  • Magnetized cold electron-positron plasma is
    uniformly injected from the left boundary.
  • Initial electro-magnetic fields (Ey,Bz)
  • satisfy perfect conductivity.
  • Particles are reflected at the right
  • boundary in order to make back flow.

relativistic equation of motion
Maxwell equations
Bz
z
Ey
y
e,e-
x
injection
reflection
M.Hoshino, et al, 1992,ApJ,390,454
14
Simulation results (s10-1)
injection
shock front
wall
upstream
0.6
downstream
0
log(N)
electrostatic field Ex/Ey0
relativistic Maxwellian
3
1
?/?0
magnetic field Bz/Bz0
  • A shock surface is generated.
  • The averaged of fields satisfy the R-H relations.
  • The spectrum is nearly relativistic Maxwellian.

3
electron energy ?/?0
1
x/(upstream gyro radius)
0
50
15
Simulation results (s10-4)
injection
shock front
wall
relativistic Maxwellian
30
upstream
downstream
nonthermal particles
0
log(N)
electrostatic field Ex/Ey0
80
0
?/?0
magnetic field Bz/Bz0
  • The amplitude of the fields is very large.
  • The averaged fields still satisfies R-H
    relations.
  • Nonthermal high energy particles appear at the
    shock front.

electron energy ?/?0
20
1
x/(upstream gyro radius)
0
20
16
Particle trajectory and time variation of energy
(electrostatic field Ex)
downstream
A
B
time ?
shock front c/2
upstream
B
A
energy (?/?0)?
1
14
space ?
  • particle Anot trapped by the shock front and not
    accelerated
  • particle Btrapped by the shock front and
    accelerated

The particles are accelerated at the shock front
The average of accelerating electric
fieldltEy/Ey0gt1.7 gt 0
17
Past studies for the shock surfing acceleration
in electron-positron plasma
  • M.Hoshino (2001) showed that
  • this phenomenon is characterized by s,
  • when sltlt1 particle energy spectrum is nonthermal,
  • accelerated particles are trapped at the shock
    surface, where a magnetic neutral sheet (MNS)
    exists.

M.Hoshino, 2001, Prog. Phys. Sup. 143, 149
18
Trapping by a magnetic neutral sheet
magnetic neutral sheet (MNS)
  • Particles are trapped because their gyro motions
    change its direction through the MNS.
  • All that time, motional electric field Ey
    accelerates the particles along the MNS.
  • In the shock transition region, Ey has a finite
    value. On the other hand, in the down stream Ey
    is almost zero. This is the reason why the
    particle acceleration occurs only at the shock
    front.

Bz
x
y
electron
Bz
Bz
x
19
Relation between s and MNS
  • The reflected particles begin to gyrate and
    induce an additional magnetic field.
  • By definition of , when s is
    small, the initial magnetic field is small and
    the particle kinetic energy is large. Then
  • initial magnetic field
  • lt
  • generated magnetic field,
  • and a MNS is generated.
  • We focus on the shock transition region in case s
    10-4 ltlt 1.

generated magnetic field (B)
Bz
Bz0
MNS
x
y
current
electron
x
20
Enlargement of the shock transition region
injection
shock transition region
wall
velocity ux/ux0
upstream
downstream
21
Shock transition region
injection
thermalize
ux/ux0
accelerated particles
Ey/Ey0 Bz/Bz0
MNS
  • The injected particles go through the shock front
    and some of them return to the front.
  • Trapping and acceleration occur at the shock
    front, not the whole shock transition region.

22
Electromagnetic fieldsaround the trapped particle
downstream
time?
upstream
space?
?Ey ?Bz The position of
accelerated particle
23
Enlargement of the shock front
particle energy ?/?0
Ey/Ey0 Bz/Bz0
inertia length (c/?p)2
24
The structure of the shock front(in downstream
frame)
  • The acceleration by Ey is unclear, because Ey has
    a large positive and negative amplitude around
    the MNS.
  • The MNS propagate upstream with velocity c/2,
    so we should discuss in the MNS frame ( shock
    frame).

inertia length (c/?p)2
60
20
Ey/Ey0 Bz/Bz0
accelerated particles
particle energy ?/?0
0
0
9.86
9.96
x/(gyro radius)
25
The structure of shock front(in shock frame)
the Lorentz transformation of the shock frame
inertia length (c/?p)2
20
50
Ey/Ey0 Bz/Bz0
accelerated particles
particle energy ?/?0
0
0
x/(gyro radius)
9.86
9.96
  • Averaged Ey is constantly positive in the
    acceleration region, ltEy/Ey0gt 0-7.
  • The averaged Ey which accelerate particles in
    this frame ltEy/Ey0gt2 ? consistent with the
    above estimate.

26
Summary
  • The acceleration phenomenon is characterized by s
    which is defined as the ratio of the magnetic
    field energy density and the particle kinetic
    energy density.
  • The additional magnetic field induced by gyrating
    particles overcome the initial magnetic field
    when s is small, and then a magnetic neutral
    sheet is generated. Therefore this acceleration
    process works effectively in the Crab nebula, s
    10-3.
  • Some particles are accelerated by motional
    electric field Ey while the magnetic neutral
    sheet traps them.
  • The magnetic neutral sheet is kept stationary at
    the shock front. We confirmed that the averaged
    Ey is positive in the shock frame and that the
    particle acceleration occurs at the shock frame.

27
To go further
  • The condition of trapping and detrapping for
    accelerated particles
  • ? Spectrum form (maximum energy, power-low or
    thermal)
  • 2-D simulation
  • ? Weibel instability
  • Magnetic field consisting of opposing two regions
    (sector structure)
  • ? coupling with reconnection, etc.

28
Measuring the magnetic field strength
The spectrum of the Crab nebula P.L.Marsden, et
al
IR
  • The spectrum has a break frequency, n1013.
  • The lifetime of the Crab is t 930 yr.

Optical
Radio
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