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Electron acceleration in laboratory-produced turbulent collisionless shocks

Authors :
Anatoly Spitkovsky
Yoichi Sakawa
George Swadling
Stefan Funk
C. K. Li
Wojciech Rozmus
Anna Grassi
B. B. Pollock
Drew Higginson
H.-S. Park
C. Bruulsema
Gianluca Gregori
Scott Wilks
Dmitri Ryutov
Siegfried Glenzer
H. G. Rinderknecht
James Ross
Frederico Fiuza
Bruce Remington
R. P. Drake
Source :
Nature Physics. 16:916-920
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Astrophysical collisionless shocks are among the most powerful particle accelerators in the Universe. Generated by violent interactions of supersonic plasma flows with the interstellar medium, supernova remnant shocks are observed to amplify magnetic fields1 and accelerate electrons and protons to highly relativistic speeds2–4. In the well-established model of diffusive shock acceleration5, relativistic particles are accelerated by repeated shock crossings. However, this requires a separate mechanism that pre-accelerates particles to enable shock crossing. This is known as the ‘injection problem’, which is particularly relevant for electrons, and remains one of the most important puzzles in shock acceleration6. In most astrophysical shocks, the details of the shock structure cannot be directly resolved, making it challenging to identify the injection mechanism. Here we report results from laser-driven plasma flow experiments, and related simulations, that probe the formation of turbulent collisionless shocks in conditions relevant to young supernova remnants. We show that electrons can be effectively accelerated in a first-order Fermi process by small-scale turbulence produced within the shock transition to relativistic non-thermal energies, helping overcome the injection problem. Our observations provide new insight into electron injection at shocks and open the way for controlled laboratory studies of the physics underlying cosmic accelerators. In laser–plasma experiments complemented by simulations, electron acceleration is observed in turbulent collisionless shocks. This work clarifies the pre-acceleration to relativistic energies required for the onset of diffusive shock acceleration.

Details

ISSN :
17452481 and 17452473
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7f33d9ecab89a32d6fcb4b785b9d8ff9