4.7 Article

NONLINEAR STUDY OF BELL'S COSMIC RAY CURRENT-DRIVEN INSTABILITY

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 694, Issue 1, Pages 626-642

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/694/1/626

Keywords

cosmic rays; ISM: jets and outflows; ISM: magnetic fields; supernova remnants

Funding

  1. Division Of Astronomical Sciences
  2. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [0807381] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The cosmic ray current-driven (CRCD) instability, predicted by Bell, consists of nonresonant, growing plasma waves driven by the electric current of cosmic rays (CRs) that stream along the magnetic field ahead of both relativistic and nonrelativistic shocks. Combining an analytic, kinetic model with one-, two-, and three-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations, we confirm the existence of this instability in the kinetic regime and determine its saturation mechanisms. In the linear regime, we show that, if the background plasma is well magnetized, the CRCD waves grow exponentially at the rates and wavelengths predicted by the analytic dispersion relation. The magnetization condition implies that the growth rate of the instability is much smaller than the ion cyclotron frequency. As the instability becomes nonlinear, significant turbulence forms in the plasma. This turbulence reduces the growth rate of the field and damps the shortest wavelength modes, making the dominant wavelength, lambda(d), grow proportional to the square of the field. At constant CR current, we find that plasma acceleration along the motion of CRs saturates the instability at the magnetic field level such that upsilon(A) similar to upsilon(d,cr), where v(A) is the Alfven velocity in the amplified field, and upsilon(d,cr) is the drift velocity of CRs. The instability can also saturate earlier if CRs get strongly deflected by the amplified field, which happens when their Larmor radii get close to lambda(d). We apply these results to the case of CRs propagating in the upstream medium of the forward shock in supernova remnants. If we consider only the most energetic CRs that escape from the shock, we obtain that the field amplification factor of similar to 10 can be reached. This confirms the CRCD instability as a potentially important component of magnetic amplification process in astrophysical shock environments.

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