Bulletin of the American Physical Society
65th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Monday–Friday, October 30–November 3 2023; Denver, Colorado
Session NM09: Mini-conference: Collisionless and Weakly Collisional Shocks in Laboratory and Space Plasmas I
9:30 AM–12:15 PM,
Wednesday, November 1, 2023
Room: Governor's Square 16
Chair: Nikolai Pogorelov, University of Alabama, Huntersville
Abstract: NM09.00010 : Mach number dependence on the shock dynamics and non-thermal electron acceleration efficiency
11:45 AM–12:00 PM
Presenter:
Takanobu Amano
(University of Tokyo)
Authors:
Takanobu Amano
(University of Tokyo)
Taiki Jikei
(The University of Tokyo)
Yosuke Matsumoto
(Chiba University)
Masahiro Hoshino
(Univ of Tokyo)
At moderate Mach numbers relevant to shocks in the heliosphere, the electron acceleration is regulated by electromagnetic waves on the whistler mode branch, which has been confirmed by MMS spacecraft observations. We show that the in-situ observation is well explained by a theory of stochastic shock drift acceleration (SSDA). In the simplest case where the wave is strong enough and particle momentum distribution is nearly isotropic, SSDA may be recognized as essentially an extension of DSA to a shock of finite thickness. The theory predicts that, as long as the simplifying assumptions above are adequate, the efficiency of particle acceleration becomes better at higher the Alfvenic Mach number in the Hoffmann-Teller frame.
While in-situ observations demonstrate the shocks are full of turbulence, the shock behaves even more violently at higher Mach numbers. This is because the Alfven-Ion-Cyclotron (AIC) instability at moderate Mach numbers transitions to the Weibel instability. Both of them are on the same dispersion branch and driven unstable by the effective anisotropy associated with the reflected ions. However, the dynamics in the Weibel regime is quite different in character. The magnetic field is substantially amplified to produce folded current sheets within the shock transition layer that eventually breaks up via spontaneous magnetic reconnection. In this process, the flow kinetic energy is once converted to magnetic energy and then finally dissipates. This suggests that there is a new energy conversion channel effective only in a very high Mach number regime. We have confirmed both in theory and numerical simulations that the process is a generic feature of high Mach number shocks relevant to young supernova remnants.
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