Relativistic shocks: Particle acceleration and magnetic field generation, and emission

Oct, 2004
6 pages
Published in:
  • AIP Conf.Proc. 745 (2005) 1, 534-539
Contribution to:
  • Published: Mar 16, 2005
e-Print:

Citations per year

20042005200620072008210
Abstract: (AIP)
Shock acceleration is an ubiquitous phenomenon in astrophysical plasmas. Plasma waves and their associated instabilities (e.g., Buneman, Weibel and other two‐stream instabilities) created in collisionless shocks are responsible for particle (electron, positron, and ion) acceleration. Using a 3‐D relativistic electromagnetic particle (REMP) code, we have investigated particle acceleration associated with a relativistic jet front propagating into an ambient plasma with and without initial magnetic fields. We find small differences in the results for no ambient and modest ambient magnetic fields. Simulations show that the Weibel instability created in the collisionless shock front accelerates jet and ambient particles both perpendicular and parallel to the jet propagation direction. The non‐linear fluctuation amplitudes of densities, currents, electric, and magnetic fields in the electron‐positron shock are larger than those found in the electron‐ion shock at the same simulation time. This comes from the fact that both electrons and positrons contribute to generation of the Weibel instability. While some Fermi acceleration may occur at the jet front, the majority of electron and positron acceleration takes place behind the jet front and cannot be characterized as Fermi acceleration. The simulation results show that the Weibel instability is responsible for generating and amplifying nonuniform, small‐scale (mainly transverse) magnetic fields which contribute to the electron’s (positron’s) transverse deflection behind the jet head. This small scale magnetic field structure is appropriate to the generation of “jitter” radiation from deflected electrons (positrons) as opposed to synchrotron radiation. The jitter radiation has different properties than synchrotron radiation calculated assuming a uniform magnetic field. The jitter radiation resulting from small scale magnetic field structures may be important for understanding the complex time structure and spectral evolution observed in gamma‐ray bursts and other astrophysical sources containing relativistic jets and relativistic collisionless shocks.
Note:
  • 6 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Proceeding of International Symposium on High Energy Gamma-Ray Astronomy (July 26-30, 2004) Journal-ref: AIP Conference Proceedings, 745, pp. 534-539, 2005
  • 98.70.Rz
  • 95.30.Qd
  • plasma shock waves
  • astrophysical plasma
  • acceleration
  • magnetic fields
  • plasma instability
  • astrophysical jets
  • gamma-ray sources (astronomical)