4.7 Article

Non-Fermi power-law acceleration in astrophysical plasma shocks

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 617, Issue 2, Pages L107-L110

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/427387

Keywords

acceleration of particles; gamma rays : bursts; instabilities; magnetic fields; shock waves; supernova remnants

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Collisionless plasma shock theory, which applies, for example, to the afterglow of gamma-ray bursts, still contains key issues that are poorly understood. In this Letter, we study charged particle dynamics in a highly relativistic collisionless shock numerically using similar to10(9) particles. We find a power-law distribution of accelerated electrons, which upon detailed investigation turns out to originate from an acceleration mechanism that is decidedly different from Fermi acceleration. Electrons are accelerated by strong filamentation instabilities in the shocked interpenetrating plasmas and coincide spatially with the power-law-distributed current filamentary structures. These structures are an inevitable consequence of the now well-established Weibel-like two-stream instability that operates in relativistic collisionless shocks. The electrons are accelerated and decelerated instantaneously and locally: a scenery that differs qualitatively from recursive acceleration mechanisms such as Fermi acceleration. The slopes of the electron distribution power laws are in concordance with the particle power-law spectra inferred from observed afterglow synchrotron radiation in gamma-ray bursts, and the mechanism can possibly explain more generally the origin of nonthermal radiation from shocked interstellar and circumstellar regions and from relativistic jets.

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