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Mario A. Riquelme, Anatoly Spitkovsky Department of Astrophysical Sciences, Princeton University

Generation of magnetic field upstream of shocks: the cosmic ray current-driven (CRCD) instability. Mario A. Riquelme, Anatoly Spitkovsky Department of Astrophysical Sciences, Princeton University. Motivation. Observation of X-ray synchrotron emission from rims in SNRs suggest that:

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Mario A. Riquelme, Anatoly Spitkovsky Department of Astrophysical Sciences, Princeton University

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  1. Generation of magnetic field upstream of shocks: the cosmic ray current-driven (CRCD) instability Mario A. Riquelme, Anatoly Spitkovsky Department of Astrophysical Sciences, Princeton University

  2. Motivation • Observation of X-ray synchrotron emission from rims in SNRs suggest that: -Electrons are accelerated to ultrarelativistic energies in these environments. -Magnetic field can be a factor of ~100 bigger than the typical ISM field in the downstream medium. • Such amplification would ease the acceleration of galactic CRs in SNRs until the “knee” (~3x1015 eV).

  3. Possible mechanisms • Idea: field is amplified by the CRs themselves. • Resonant instability: amplification of Alfven waves due to their resonant interaction with CRs ( RL,CR ~ l ). • In 2004 A. Bell predicted that plasma waves can be amplified non-resonantly (RL,CR >> l)due to the presence ofthe cosmic ray current (JCR) . • This cosmic ray current-driven (CRCD) instability would have a growth rate much faster than the resonant instability.

  4. The CRCD instability Right handed, circularly polarized when B0 || Jcr z Je x Btr Dv B0 Jcr y Je x

  5. In this study... • We combine an analytical, kinetic model of the CRCD waves valid in the non-linear regime, with particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations. • We study the non-linear properties of the instability, mainly focused on its possible saturation mechanisms and its applications to the case of SNRs’ shocks.

  6. The CRCD waves properties • One-dimensional + constant CR current • We calulate analytically a non-linear, kinetic dispersion relation and obtain that the waves will grow exponentially with: • lmax = cB0 /Jcr and gmax= 2p Va,0 / lmaxuntilVa ~ Vd,cr. Our model allows for evolution of the phase velocity of the wave, Vf. Vf  Va2/Vd,cr This would explain the saturation at Va ~ Vd,cr, since at that point the plasma moves at a velocity of about Vd,crso, from the point of view of the plasma, the CR current has stopped. • Our model also predicts a transverse velocity of the plasma Vtr f Va,0, where f=Btr/B0 (important when multidimensional effects are considered). (confirmed by one-dimensional PIC simulations)

  7. Multidimensional effects Va,0/Vd,,cr = 1/100 ncr/ni = 0.04 mi/me= 10 Vd,cr = c z Jcr Je • The possible initial filamentation: (Vd,cr/ Va,0)(ncr / ni) = 4 B0 y x (See Niemiec et al. 2008)

  8. Multidimensional effects Va,0/Vd,,cr = 1/100 ncr/ni = 0.004 mi/me= 10 Vd,cr = c z Jcr Je • The possible initial filamentation: (Vd,cr/Va,0)(ncr / ni) = 0.4 B0 y x Requirement (Vd,cr/Va,0 )(ncr / ni)<< 1

  9. The 3D structure of the instability

  10. The 3D structure of the instability

  11. The 3D structure of the instability y (CR current still constant) electrons x CRs z Bo Va,0/Vd,,cr = 1/40 ncr/ni = 0.0125 mi/me= 10 Vd,cr = c Remember: Vtr ~ f Va,0, where f=Btr/B0 Growth rate, g, decreases but Va ~Vd,cr at saturation. Dominant wavelength, ld , grows. Plasma accelerates.

  12. The 3D structure of the instability y x CRs (CR current still constant) electrons Bo z Va,0/Vd,,cr = 1/40 ncr/ni = 0.0125 mi/me= 10 Vd,cr = c Remember: Vtr ~ f Va,0, where f=Btr/B0 Growth rate, g, decreases but Va ~Vd,cr at saturation. Dominant wavelength, ld , grows. Plasma accelerates.

  13. Migration to longer wavelengths Since Vturb~ Vtr~ f Va,0, then for a wavelength l • Time scale of suppression ~ l/fVa,0. • Time scale of growth ~ g-1(l) (from the dispersion relation). g-1(ld) ≈ b ld/fVa,0=> b  2 ldlmax((f/3)2 + 1)/2 (solid) where f = Btr/B0 This migration is faster than suggested by previous MHD studies (Bell 2004). Va,0/Vd,cr = 1/40, Vd,cr=c (dash-dotted) Va,0/Vd,cr = 1/20, Vd,cr=c/2 (dashed) Va,0/Vd,cr = 1/10, Vd,cr=c (dotted)

  14. The back-reaction on the CRs Vcr (semi-isotropic velocity distribution, => Vd,cr =c/2) x Red and green lines represent Btr2for one-dimensional runs with CR’s Lorentz factors, G, of 20 and 40. Here Va,0/Vd,cr=1/40 Orange lines show a three-dimensional simulation with G=30 (solid is Bx2 and dotted is Btr2). Here Va,0/Vd,cr=1/20. In all three simulations saturation occurs when RL,cr≈ld. Thus, in general, the CRCD instability will saturate either when Va ~ Vd,cr or when RL,cr ~ ld, whichever happens first. Also, many CRs are scattered back in the –x direction => efficient scattering mechanism

  15. Application An estimate for the magnetic amplification in SNRs (only considering the most energetic CRs that escape from the remnant): f((f/3)2+1) = 130 (Vsh/104km/sec)3(10km/sec/Va,0)2(hesc/0.05), where hesc = FE,cr/(nimiVsh3 /2). This would imply a typical amplification factor due only to the most energetic “escaping” particles of f ≈ 10.

  16. Conclusions • Using PIC simulations, we confirm the existence of the CRCD instability predicted by Bell (2004). • One-dimensional geometry + constant CR: CRCD waves grow exponentially until Va ~ Vd,cr (intrinsicsaturation is due to plasma moving at the drift velocity of CRs) • Including multidimensional effects we see the formation of significant turbulence in the plasma when the instability becomes non-linear (Btr ~ B0).

  17. Conclusions • Turbulence makes the instability evolve rapidly into longer wavelengths (ld ≈ lmax((f/3)2 + 1)/2), where f = Btr/B0. • Turbulence also reduces the growth rate of the field, but intrinsic saturation still happens due to plasma acceleration at Va ~Vd,cr. • However, the back-reaction on the CRs can stop the CR current and cause saturation whenRL,cr ≈ ld. • The magnetic amplification in SNRs (only considering the most energetic, or “escaping” CRs) could reach a factor of ~10.

  18. Conclusions • Open questions: -Does the CR current really exist? i..e. are CR only positively charged particles? (injection problem). -What happens in the region close to the shock? Can we expect further magnetic amplification due to the diffusing CRs current? -Why in almost all the cases (except SN1006) the amplification seems to happen symmetrically all around the remnant?

  19. Motivation Example: Cassiopeia A (Cas A) Red: infrared (Spitzer). Yellow: optical (Hubble). Blue and green: X-ray (Chandra).

  20. The CRCD waves properties • One-dimensional + constant CR current B0 Jcr Je

  21. The CRCD waves properties • Numerical confirmation (one-dimensional simulations): Va,0 /c = 1/10 • Our model also predicts a transverse velocity of the plasma Vtr ~ f Va,0, where f=Btr/B0 (important for turbulence generation). Solid-yellow: Vd,cr =1c Solid-green: Vd,cr =0.9c Solid-red: Vd,cr =0.8c Dotted-yellow: Vd,cr =0.6c Dotted-green: Vd,cr =0.4c Dotted-red: Vd,cr =0.2c

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