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Nonthermal relativistic plasmas are ubiquitous in astrophysical systems like pulsar wind nebulae and active galactic nuclei, as inferred from their emission spectra. The underlying nonthermal particle acceleration (NTPA) processes have traditionally been modeled with a Fokker-Planck (FP) diffusion-advection equation in momentum space. In this paper, we directly test the FP framework in ab-initio kinetic simulations of driven magnetized turbulence in relativistic pair plasma. By statistically analyzing the motion of tracked particles, we demonstrate the diffusive nature of NTPA and measure the FP energy diffusion ($D$) and advection ($A$) coefficients as functions of particle energy $gamma m_e c^2$. We find that $D(gamma)$ scales as $gamma^2$ in the high-energy nonthermal tail, in line with 2nd-order Fermi acceleration theory, but has a much weaker scaling at lower energies. We also find that $A$ is not negligible and reduces NTPA by tending to pull particles towards the peak of the particle energy distribution. This study provides strong support for the FP picture of turbulent NTPA, thereby enhancing our understanding of space and astrophysical plasmas.
Numerical algorithms to load relativistic Maxwell distributions in particle-in-cell (PIC) and Monte-Carlo simulations are presented. For stationary relativistic Maxwellian, the inverse transform method and the Sobol algorithm are reviewed. To boost p
Magnetic reconnection, especially in the relativistic regime, provides an efficient mechanism for accelerating relativistic particles and thus offers an attractive physical explanation for nonthermal high-energy emission from various astrophysical so
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A theoretical framework for low-frequency electromagnetic (drift-)kinetic turbulence in a collisionless, multi-species plasma is presented. The result generalises reduced magnetohydrodynamics (RMHD) and kinetic RMHD (Schekochihin et al. 2009) for pre
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