Back to Search Start Over

The Importance of Heat Flux in Quasi-Parallel Collisionless Shocks

Authors :
Haggerty, Colby C.
Caprioli, Damiano
Cassak, Paul A.
Barbhuiya, M. Hasan
Wilson III, Lynn
Turner, Drew
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Collisionless plasma shocks are a common feature of many space and astrophysical systems and are sources of high-energy particles and non-thermal emission, channeling as much as 20\% of the shock's energy into non-thermal particles. The generation and acceleration of these non-thermal particles have been extensively studied, however, how these particles feed back on the shock hydrodynamics has not been fully treated. This work presents the results of self-consistent hybrid particle-in-cell simulations that show the effect of self-generated non-thermal particle populations on the nature of collisionless, quasi-parallel shocks. They contribute to a significant heat flux density upstream of the shock. Non-thermal particles downstream of the shock leak into the upstream region, taking energy away from the shock. This increases the compression ratio, slows the shock down, and flattens the non-thermal population's spectral index for lower Mach number shocks. We incorporate this into a revised theory for the Rankine-Hugoniot jump conditions that include this effect and it shows excellent agreement with simulations. The results have the potential to explain discrepancies between predictions and observations in a wide range of systems, such as inaccuracies of predictions of arrival times of coronal mass ejections and the conflicting radio and x-ray observations of intracluster shocks. These effects will likely need to be included in fluid modeling to accurately predict shock evolution.<br />Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, a lot of appendix

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2307.12423
Document Type :
Working Paper