1,306 research outputs found

    Possible role of magnetic reconnection in the electromagnetic counterpart of binary black hole merger

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    We propose a qualitative scenario to interpret the argued association between the direct measurement of the gravitational wave event GW150914 by Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory (LIGO)-Virgo collaborations and the hard XX-ray transient detected by Fermi-Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) 0.40.4 sec after. In a binary system of two gravitationally collapsing objects with a non-vanishing electric charge, the compenetration of the two magnetospheres occurring during the coalescence, through magnetic reconnection, produces a highly collimated relativistic outflow that becomes optically thin and shines in the GBM field of view. We propose that this process should be expected as a commonplace in the future joint gravitational/electromagnetic detections and, in case of neutron star-neutron star merger event, might lead to detectable XX- or γ\gamma-ray precursors to, or transients associated with, the gravitational bursts.Comment: 8 pages; 1 figure. JCAP, in pres

    Cross-field transport in Goldreich-Sridhar MHD turbulence

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    I derive analytically the temporal dependence of the perpendicular transport coefficient of a charged particle in the three-dimensional anisotropic turbulence conjectured by Goldreich-Sridhar by implementing multi-spacecraft constraints on the turbulence power spectrum. The particle motion away from the turbulent local field line is assessed as gradient/curvature drift of the guiding-center and compared with the magnetic field line random walk. At inertial scales much smaller than the turbulence outer scale, particles decorrelate from field lines in a free-streaming motion, with no diffusion. In the solar wind at 11 AU, for energy sufficiently small (<1< 1 keV protons), the perpendicular average displacement due to field line tangling generally dominates over two decades of turbulent scales. However, for higher energies (25\simeq 25 MeV protons) within the range of multi-spacecraft measurements, the longitudinal spread originating from transport due to gradient/curvature drift reaches up to 1020\simeq 10^\circ- 20^\circ. This result highlights the role of the perpendicular transport in the interpretation of interplanetary and interstellar data.Comment: 25 pages, 3 figures, PRE in pres

    Localized enhancements of energetic particles at oblique collisionless shocks

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    We investigate the spatial distribution of charged particles accelerated by non-relativistic oblique fast collisionless shocks using three-dimensional test-particle simulations. We find that the density of low-energy particles exhibit a localised enhancement at the shock, resembling the "spike" measured at interplanetary shocks. In contrast to previous results based on numerical solutions to the focused transport equation, we find a shock spike for any magnetic obliquity, from quasi-perpendicular to parallel. We compare the pitch-angle distribution with respect to the local magnetic field and the momentum distribution far downstream and very near the shock within the spike; our findings are compatible with predictions from the scatter-free shock drift acceleration (SDA) limit in these regions. The enhancement of low-energy particles measured by Voyager 1 at solar termination shock is comparable with our profiles. Our simulations allow for predictions of supra-thermal protons at interplanetary shocks within ten solar radii to be tested by Solar Probe Mission. They also have implications for the interpretation of ions accelerated at supernova remnant shocks.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, MNRAS in pres

    Vortical field amplification and particle acceleration at rippled shocks

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    Supernova Remnants (SNRs) shocks are believed to accelerate charged particles and to generate strong turbulence in the post-shock flow. From high-energy observations in the past decade, a magnetic field at SNR shocks largely exceeding the shock-compressed interstellar field has been inferred. We outline how such a field amplification results from a small-scale dynamo process downstream of the shock, providing an explicit expression for the turbulence back-reaction to the fluid whirling. The spatial scale of the XX-ray rims and the short time-variability can be obtained by using reasonable parameters for the interstellar turbulence. We show that such a vortical field saturation is faster than the acceleration time of the synchrotron emitting energetic electrons.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; to appear in the proceedings of the RICAP-13, Roma International Conference on AstroParticle Physic

    Turbulent amplification of magnetic field driven by dynamo effect at rippled shocks

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    We derive analytically the vorticity generated downstream of a two-dimensional rippled hydromagnetic shock neglecting fluid viscosity and resistivity. The growth of the turbulent component of the downstream magnetic field is driven by the vortical eddies motion. We determine an analytic time-evolution of the magnetic field amplification at shocks, so far described only numerically, until saturation occurs due to seed-field reaction to field lines whirling. The explicit expression of the amplification growth rate and of the non-linear field back-reaction in terms of the parameters of shock and interstellar density fluctuations is derived from MHD jump conditions at rippled shocks. A magnetic field saturation up to the order of milligauss and a short-time variability in the XX-ray observations of supernova remnants can be obtained by using reasonable parameters for the interstellar turbulence.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, The Astrophyical Journal in pres

    Early-time velocity autocorrelation for charged particles diffusion and drift in static magnetic turbulence

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    Using test-particle simulations, we investigate the temporal dependence of the two-point velocity correlation function for charged particles scattering in a time-independent spatially fluctuating magnetic field derived from a three-dimensional isotropic turbulence power spectrum. Such a correlation function allowed us to compute the spatial coefficients of diffusion both parallel and perpendicular to the average magnetic field. Our simulations confirm the dependence of the perpendicular diffusion coefficient on turbulence energy density and particle energy predicted previously by a model for early-time charged particle transport. Using the computed diffusion coefficients, we exploit the particle velocity autocorrelation to investigate the time-scale over which the particles "decorrelate" from the solution to the unperturbed equation of motion. Decorrelation time-scales are evaluated for parallel and perpendicular motions, including the drift of the particles from the local magnetic field line. The regimes of strong and weak magnetic turbulence are compared for various values of the ratio of the particle gyroradius to the correlation length of the magnetic turbulence. Our simulation parameters can be applied to energetic particles in the interplanetary space, cosmic rays at the supernova shocks, and cosmic-rays transport in the intergalactic medium.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, The Astrophyical Journal in pres
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