ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
In this second paper of a series, we discuss the dynamics of a plasma entering the precursor of an unmagnetized, relativistic collisionless pair shock. We discuss how this background plasma is decelerated and heated through its interaction with a microturbulence that results from the growth of a current filamentation instability (CFI) in the shock precursor. We make use, in particular, of the reference frame $mathcal R_{rm w}$ in which the turbulence is mostly magnetic. This frame moves at relativistic velocities towards the shock front at rest, decelerating gradually from the far to the near precursor. In a first part, we construct a fluid model to derive the deceleration law of the background plasma expected from the scattering of suprathermal particles off the microturbulence. This law leads to the relationship $gamma_{rm p},sim,xi_{rm b}^{-1/2}$ between the background plasma Lorentz factor $gamma_{rm p}$ and the normalized pressure of the beam $xi_{rm b}$; it is found to match nicely the spatial profiles observed in large-scale 2D3V particle-in-cell simulations. In a second part, we model the dynamics of the background plasma at the kinetic level, incorporating the inertial effects associated with the deceleration of $mathcal R_{rm w}$ into a Vlasov-Fokker-Planck equation for pitch-angle diffusion. We show how the effective gravity in $mathcal R_{rm w}$ drives the background plasma particles through friction on the microturbulence, leading to efficient plasma heating. Finally, we compare a Monte Carlo simulation of our model with dedicated PIC simulations and conclude that it can satisfactorily reproduce both the heating and the deceleration of the background plasma in the shock precursor, thereby providing a successful 1D description of the shock transition at the microscopic level.
We develop a comprehensive theoretical model of relativistic collisionless pair shocks mediated by the current filamentation instability. We notably characterize the noninertial frame in which this instability is of a mostly magnetic nature, and desc
In this first paper of a series dedicated to the microphysics of unmagnetized, relativistic collisionless pair shocks, we discuss the physics of the Weibel-type transverse current filamentation instability (CFI) that develops in the shock precursor,
In this third paper of a series, we discuss the physics of the population of accelerated particles in the precursor of an unmagnetized, relativistic collisionless pair shock. In particular, we provide a theoretical estimate of their scattering length
Relativistic astrophysical collisionless shocks represent outstanding dissipation agents of the huge power of relativistic outflows produced by accreting black holes, core collapsed supernovae and other objects into multi-messenger radiation (cosmic
Relativistic shocks are usually thought to occur in violent astrophysical explosions. These collisionless shocks are mediated by a plasma kinetic streaming instability, often loosely referred to as the Weibel instability, which generates strong magne